AMD has not yet done and still has a lot of things in store for us. After the company recently appeared in Radeon Crimson 17.3.2 beta driver files, Radeon RX 500 Series of graphics cards claimed to be release this year in April.

According to some reports, Radeon RX 500 series of graphics cards will be based on an AMP Polaris Graphics chip architecture. But also said that the graphics card will be greatly improved in a specification of the functions that the graphics card could give. The enhancement specifications falsified the rumor reports that the RX 500 would just be like the latest Vega design.

Digital Trend has reported that the forthcoming enhancement of Radeon RX 500 is relevant as its design would be based different process. This different manufacturing process is described as the low power plus wherein RX 500 would be based on the 14nm low power early FinFET- basing in the processing technology.

The reports suggest that the said processing technology is an ideal as it enables higher-end performance of Radeon RX 500 without increasing its power through time. Also, in the images escalated someone is holding the Radeon RX 570 and the RX 580 cards.

Radeon RX 570 and 580, are actually refreshed of the RX 470 and 480 cards. Which will serve soon as an affordable alternative mainstream to the forthcoming AMD's Radeon RX Vega family of GPU aiming the enthusiast PC gaming market. In the images, the RX 570 does not include any DVI port and it will only rely on a single 6-pin power connector, Tweak Town has reported.

Also, in the Radeon RX 580 it will feature a new board design and have back of new 8-pin power connector. So, the Radeon RX 500 graphics card, RX 570 and 580 will reportedly be available on retails sometime around in April 18, 2017. AMD will be tagging the Radeon RXs as an affordable solution for PC improvement in supporting high-quality gaming experience.

Radeon RX 580 will be available at a price of $200, the Radeon RX 570 will be priced at $150, the RX 560 will be $100 and some says that the prices will somewhat be equivalent to NVIDIA's GeForce GTX 10.