Radeon R9 390 vs Radeon RX 580

AMD

Radeon R9 390

2015Boost: 1000 MHz

Popular choices:

VS
AMD

Radeon RX 580

2017Core: 1257 MHzBoost: 1340 MHz

Popular choices:

Performance Spectrum - GPU

About G3D Mark

G3D Mark is a standard benchmark that measures graphics performance in real-world gaming scenarios. It simplifies comparing cards from different brands, where higher scores directly correlate with better fps and smoother gaming experiences.

Head-to-Head Verdict, Benchmarks, Value & Long-Term Outlook

This comparison brings together gaming FPS, raw graphics performance, VRAM, feature set, power efficiency, pricing context, and long-term value so you can see which GPU actually makes more sense.

Radeon R9 390

2015

Why buy it

  • Competitive enough if your priority is price, power, or specific feature preference.

Trade-offs

  • No equivalent frame-generation stack like FSR Frame Generation (2023).
  • Poor future-proofing: 2015-era hardware with 8 GB of VRAM is already a legacy-tier option for modern games.
  • 43.7% HIGHER MSRP
    $329 MSRPvs$229 MSRP
  • Lower G3D Mark per dollar, at 26.9 vs 38.4 G3D/$ ($329 MSRP vs $229 MSRP).
  • 62.2% higher power demand at 300W vs 185W.

Radeon RX 580

2017

Why buy it

  • Costs $100 less on MSRP ($229 MSRP vs $329 MSRP).
  • Delivers 42.8% more G3D Mark for each dollar spent, at 38.4 vs 26.9 G3D/$ ($229 MSRP vs $329 MSRP).
  • Access to a newer frame-generation stack with FSR Frame Generation (2023).
  • Less risky long-term buy than Radeon R9 390: it remains the more sensible modern option while Radeon R9 390 is already legacy-tier future-proofing.
  • Draws 185W instead of 300W, a 115W reduction.

Trade-offs

  • Poor future-proofing: 2017-era hardware with 8 GB of VRAM is already a legacy-tier option for modern games.

Quick Answers

So, is Radeon R9 390 better than Radeon RX 580?
Yes, but this is not really about a huge raw performance gap. The broader synthetic picture is also very close at 8,855 vs 8,799 in G3D Mark. The bigger reason to prefer Radeon R9 390 is the overall package: you are getting FSR upscaling.
Which one is more future-proof for 2026 and beyond?
Radeon RX 580 is the more future-proof choice for 2026 and beyond. You are getting a newer 2017 generation instead of 2015, better frame-generation support with FSR Frame Generation (2023) instead of FSR upscaling, and a 14nm process instead of 28nm. That broader feature stack should age better as more games lean on modern upscaling and frame-generation support.
Which one is the smarter buy today, not just the cheaper card?
Radeon R9 390 is the smarter buy by a wide margin. Radeon R9 390 is about 43.7% more expensive on MSRP at $329 MSRP versus $229 MSRP, and you are getting 0.6% higher G3D Mark. Radeon RX 580 really only makes sense now as a very cheap stopgap or a used-market placeholder.
When does Radeon RX 580 make more sense than Radeon R9 390?
Yes. Radeon RX 580 is still an excellent gaming GPU in 2026: it is still comfortable for 1080p and decent for 1440p, though 4K is more situational. It makes more sense if your priority is newer architecture, lower power draw (185W vs 300W), future-proofing, and staying closer to $229 MSRP more than squeezing out the extra headroom of Radeon R9 390. The trade-off is that Radeon R9 390 currently gives you 0.6% higher G3D Mark. Radeon RX 580 still holds the G3D-per-dollar lead, so the performance win comes with a real value premium.

Games Benchmarks

Real-world benchmarks and performance projections based on comprehensive hardware analysis and comparative metrics. Values represent expected performance on High/Ultra settings at 1080p, 1440p, and 4K. Modeled using a Ryzen 7 9800X3D reference profile to minimize specific CPU bottlenecks.

Note: Performance behavior can vary per game. Specific architectures may perform better or worse depending on game engine optimizations and API implementation.

Path of Exile 2

Path of Exile 2

PresetRadeon R9 390Radeon RX 580
1080p
low105 FPS146 FPS
medium89 FPS129 FPS
high73 FPS110 FPS
ultra49 FPS81 FPS
1440p
low89 FPS133 FPS
medium75 FPS111 FPS
high55 FPS86 FPS
ultra36 FPS64 FPS
4K
low36 FPS59 FPS
medium32 FPS52 FPS
high20 FPS33 FPS
ultra17 FPS29 FPS
Counter-Strike 2

Counter-Strike 2

PresetRadeon R9 390Radeon RX 580
1080p
low198 FPS159 FPS
medium173 FPS137 FPS
high143 FPS119 FPS
ultra111 FPS93 FPS
1440p
low138 FPS92 FPS
medium110 FPS73 FPS
high88 FPS57 FPS
ultra67 FPS46 FPS
4K
low61 FPS37 FPS
medium50 FPS29 FPS
high45 FPS24 FPS
ultra36 FPS19 FPS
League of Legends

League of Legends

PresetRadeon R9 390Radeon RX 580
1080p
low398 FPS396 FPS
medium319 FPS317 FPS
high266 FPS264 FPS
ultra199 FPS198 FPS
1440p
low299 FPS297 FPS
medium239 FPS238 FPS
high199 FPS198 FPS
ultra149 FPS148 FPS
4K
low199 FPS198 FPS
medium159 FPS158 FPS
high133 FPS132 FPS
ultra100 FPS99 FPS
Valorant

Valorant

PresetRadeon R9 390Radeon RX 580
1080p
low224 FPS368 FPS
medium193 FPS317 FPS
high156 FPS264 FPS
ultra132 FPS198 FPS
1440p
low170 FPS290 FPS
medium146 FPS238 FPS
high113 FPS189 FPS
ultra92 FPS145 FPS
4K
low95 FPS154 FPS
medium75 FPS120 FPS
high59 FPS105 FPS
ultra45 FPS85 FPS

Technical Specifications

Side-by-side comparison of Radeon R9 390 and Radeon RX 580

AMD

Radeon R9 390

The Radeon R9 390 is manufactured by AMD. It was released in June 18 2015. It features the GCN 2.0 architecture. The boost clock speed is 1000 MHz. It has 2560 shading units. The thermal design power (TDP) is 300W. Manufactured using 28 nm process technology. G3D Mark benchmark score: 8,855 points. Launch price was $329.

AMD

Radeon RX 580

The Radeon RX 580 is manufactured by AMD. It was released in April 18 2017. It features the GCN 4.0 architecture. The core clock ranges from 1257 MHz to 1340 MHz. It has 2304 shading units. The thermal design power (TDP) is 185W. Manufactured using 14 nm process technology. G3D Mark benchmark score: 8,799 points. Launch price was $229.

Graphics Performance

The Radeon R9 390 scores 8,855 and the Radeon RX 580 reaches 8,799 in the G3D Mark benchmark — just a 0.6% difference, making them near-identical in rasterization performance. The Radeon R9 390 is built on GCN 2.0 while the Radeon RX 580 uses GCN 4.0, both on 28 nm vs 14 nm. Shader units: 2,560 (Radeon R9 390) vs 2,304 (Radeon RX 580). Raw compute: 5.12 TFLOPS (Radeon R9 390) vs 6.175 TFLOPS (Radeon RX 580). Boost clocks: 1000 MHz vs 1340 MHz.

FeatureRadeon R9 390Radeon RX 580
G3D Mark Score
8,855
8,799
Architecture
GCN 2.0
GCN 4.0
Process Node
28 nm
14 nm
Shading Units
2560+11%
2304
Compute (TFLOPS)
5.12 TFLOPS
6.175 TFLOPS+21%
Boost Clock
1000 MHz
1340 MHz+34%
ROPs
64+100%
32
TMUs
160+11%
144
L1 Cache
640 KB+11%
576 KB
L2 Cache
1 MB
2 MB+100%
Frame Generation
FSR upscaling
FSR upscaling + limited Frame Generation

Advanced Features (DLSS/FSR)

A critical advantage for the Radeon RX 580 is support for FSR Frame Generation. This allows it to generate entire frames using AI/Algorithms, essentially doubling the frame rate in CPU-bound scenarios or heavy ray-tracing titles. The Radeon R9 390 lacks specific hardware/driver support for this native frame generation tier.

FeatureRadeon R9 390Radeon RX 580
Upscaling Tech
FSR Upscaling / FSR 4
FSR Upscaling / FSR 4
Frame Generation
Not Supported
FSR Frame Generation
Ray Reconstruction
No
No
Low Latency
AMD Anti-Lag
AMD Anti-Lag
💾

Video Memory (VRAM)

Both cards feature 8 GB of GDDR5. Memory bandwidth: 320 GB/s (Radeon R9 390) vs 256 GB/s (Radeon RX 580) — a 25% advantage for the Radeon R9 390. Bus width: 512-bit vs 256-bit. L2 Cache: 1 MB (Radeon R9 390) vs 2 MB (Radeon RX 580) — the Radeon RX 580 has significantly larger on-die cache to reduce VRAM reliance.

FeatureRadeon R9 390Radeon RX 580
VRAM Capacity
8 GB
8 GB
Memory Type
GDDR5
GDDR5
Memory Bandwidth
320 GB/s+25%
256 GB/s
Bus Width
512-bit+100%
256-bit
L2 Cache
1 MB
2 MB+100%
🖥️

Display & API Support

DirectX support: 12.0 (Radeon R9 390) vs 12 (Radeon RX 580). Vulkan: 1.2 vs 1.3. OpenGL: 4.6 vs 4.6. Maximum simultaneous displays: 6 vs 4.

FeatureRadeon R9 390Radeon RX 580
DirectX
12.0
12
Vulkan
1.2
1.3+8%
OpenGL
4.6
4.6
Max Displays
6+50%
4
🎬

Media & Encoding

Hardware encoder: VCE 2.0 (Radeon R9 390) vs VCE 3.0 (Radeon RX 580). Decoder: UVD 4.2 vs UVD 6.3. Supported codecs: MPEG-2,H.264,VC-1 (Radeon R9 390) vs H.264,H.265/HEVC,VP9 (Radeon RX 580).

FeatureRadeon R9 390Radeon RX 580
Encoder
VCE 2.0
VCE 3.0
Decoder
UVD 4.2
UVD 6.3
Codecs
MPEG-2,H.264,VC-1
H.264,H.265/HEVC,VP9
🔌

Power & Dimensions

The Radeon R9 390 draws 300W versus the Radeon RX 580's 185W — a 47.4% difference. The Radeon RX 580 is more power-efficient. Recommended PSU: 750W (Radeon R9 390) vs 500W (Radeon RX 580). Power connectors: 6-pin + 8-pin vs 8-pin. Card length: 275mm vs 241mm, occupying 2 vs 2 slots. Typical load temperature: 95°C vs 75°C.

FeatureRadeon R9 390Radeon RX 580
TDP
300W
185W-38%
Recommended PSU
750W
500W-33%
Power Connector
6-pin + 8-pin
8-pin
Length
275mm
241mm
Height
109mm
Slots
2
2
Temp (Load)
95°C
75°C-21%
Perf/Watt
29.5
47.6+61%
💰

Value Analysis

The Radeon R9 390 launched at $329 MSRP, while the Radeon RX 580 launched at $229. The Radeon RX 580 costs 30.4% less ($100 savings) on MSRP. Performance per dollar on MSRP (G3D Mark / MSRP): 26.9 (Radeon R9 390) vs 38.4 (Radeon RX 580) — the Radeon RX 580 offers 42.8% better value. The Radeon RX 580 is the newer GPU (2017 vs 2015).

FeatureRadeon R9 390Radeon RX 580
MSRP
$329
$229-30%
Performance per Dollar
26.9
38.4+43%
Codename
Grenada
Polaris 20
Release
June 18 2015
April 18 2017
Ranking
#296
#301