Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Preorders for AMD’s RX 9000 series may open this month

Add as a preferred source on Google
Various AMD RX 9000 series graphics cards.
AMD

Some much-needed good news just popped up in relation to AMD’s best graphics cards, the RX 9070 XT and RX 9070. As spotted by momomo_us on X (formerly Twitter), the cards have been listed on the B&H website, and although you can’t buy them right now, there’s a preorder date for later this month. With the RTX 50-series set to launch on January 30, can AMD still beat Nvidia to the punch?

During AMD’s CES 2025 keynote, the RDNA 4 lineup was largely a no-show, with nothing but a promise that we’d find out more soon. We weren’t given the specs, much less a firm release date. While we still don’t know when the RX 9000 series will truly arrive, at least we now know when the preorders are likely to start.  Keep in mind that none of this is official information from AMD, so everything could still change.

Recommended Videos

B&H listed four Asus RX 9070 XT (and non-XT) cards. We’ve already seen these GPUs teased by Asus, as well as some Gigabyte models in the flesh at CES. The preorder date has been set to Thursday, January 23, starting at 9 a.m. ET.

Screenshot of the B&H website showing RX 9070 XT preorders.
B&H

Unfortunately, B&H didn’t reveal any of the key information we’re all still waiting for, such as the number of cores or the maximum clock speed. We’ve seen mentions of the RX 9070 XT possibly hitting up to 3.1GHz, which would be an impressive feat; the RX 9070 was also spotted running Call of Duty: Black Ops 6 at an average of 99 frames per second (fps).

Specs aside, we’re all still left with even more pressing questions, such as how much these GPUs will cost. AMD admitted that it was waiting to hear what Nvidia was plotting before talking about RDNA 4, so this could mean that it plans to undercut the competition. We now know that the RTX 5070 will be priced at $550 and the RTX 5070 Ti at $750. If AMD can find some sort of a middle ground in that price range, the new GPUs could be a hit.

There’s also the question of how long it’ll take for the cards to become available. Even if these January 23 preorders are real (which we can’t be sure about right now), the release date could be some time away. Nvidia’s RTX 5090 and RTX 5080 are set to arrive on January 30, with the other two GPUs to follow sometime in February, so AMD has a chance to release its cards right in the middle of those two product launches.

Monica J. White
Monica is a computing writer at Digital Trends, focusing on PC hardware. Since joining the team in 2021, Monica has written…
In a market where Mac has been aspirational, it’s somehow a better deal than windows machines now
Windows Laptops became so expensive that MacBooks look sensible now
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

For a long time, the laptop buying advice was simple enough. Windows had a more versatile portfolio that brought you affordable, mid-range, high-end, and even gaming options, while MacBooks were known as the easy premium recommendation.

But owing to the pricing circus caused by memory shortages and component price hikes, the equation makes no sense anymore.

Read more
HP’s new RTX 5070 laptop feels like the sweet spot between thin and bulky
The new HyperX Omen 15 combines AMD and Intel and targets portability without fully sacrificing performance.
HP HyperX OMEN 15 Gaming Laptop

Modern gaming laptops have largely drifted toward two extremes lately: massive 16-inch and 18-inch desktop replacements, or ultra-compact 14-inch machines that still feel slightly cramped for serious gaming sessions. That’s exactly why HP’s new HyperX Omen 15 feels refreshing, because it brings back the familiar 15-inch gaming laptop formula with a chassis that still feels portable without sacrificing proper gaming hardware underneath.

HP’s compact HyperX Omen 15 packs RTX 5070 graphics with AMD and Intel options

Read more
Corsair is putting Chinese RAM in mainstream market. It won’t quite end the crisis though
A cheaper DDR5 supplier could shake up the market, but it is not a magic fix
Samsung DDR4 RAM in hand

After months of painfully expensive RAM and SSD prices, the memory market may finally be showing signs of pressure from an unexpected direction: China. New reports suggest that Chinese memory manufacturers are rapidly expanding production of DRAM and NAND chips, and that major hardware brands are starting to take notice. The most notable example so far is Corsair, which has reportedly tested DDR5 memory modules using chips from Chinese DRAM giant ChangXin Memory Technologies, better known as CXMT.

This feels inevitable. Memory prices have remained frustratingly high across PCs, laptops, and storage devices for months. So when Chinese suppliers began offering RAM at nearly half the cost of some global competitors, manufacturers were always going to at least explore the option. According to market reports, some CXMT DDR5 modules are reportedly being sold near the $150 range, while equivalent products from larger global suppliers can hover between $300 and $400.

Read more