The latest Vega speculations have the initial releasing of the Vega 10 graphics card just before Taiwan's Computex at the end of May 2017. In spite of that, AMD's not-yet-released Ryzen CPUs and Vega GPUs have been an exercise in frustration for months, not because the devices look bad, but tech fans always want to know more than the semiconductor company is willing to let on.

Reports are claiming that AMD will be rolling out the cards during a special event in May. Although it's possible, nevertheless, it would be the first time that AMD has ever unleashed a graphics card at Computex, according to WCCF Tech.

The AMD Vega 10 GPU architecture is the next-Gen graphics silicon the Radeon-red team is currently working on for an early 2017 release. The product promises to offer a graphics card that can finally go head to head with the very top-end of Nvidia's GPU stack.

Meanwhile, the prolonged absence of NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti graphics card was slated to finally come out soon. Rumors are pointing to the upcoming PAX East event that is set in March as being an ideal launching pad for the device.

The Nvidia's Pascal architecture claimed that the GeForce GTX 1080 Ti will come along with a major boost to gaming systems. Comparing to its previous chipsets, the NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti graphics card boasts an estimated 12 billion transistors, more improved than the 7.2 billion on the GTX 1080.

The NVIDIA GTX 1080 Ti will sport a 4.8 GB of RAM that is faster than its predecessor. It will also packed a GDDRX5 type RAM, which is a higher bandwidth variant compared to the regular GDDR. The NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti is speculated to have a price ranging somewhere between $630 and $1200, PC GamesN reported.

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