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Meet Radeon Software Adrenalin Edition

AMD’S Radeon Software Adrenalin Edition update puts more power at your fingertips.

- BY BRAD CHACOS

It hasn’t been true for years now, but people still say AMD’S drivers suck. Radeon Software Adrenalin Edition ( go.pcworld.com/rsae) definitive­ly proves them wrong.

The latest in a series of massive annual Radeon Software feature updates, Adrenalin builds on the success of Catalyst Omega ( go. pcworld.com/cato), Crimson ( go.pcworld. com/crim), Relive ( go.pcworld.com/relv), and Relive 17.7.2 ( go.pcworld.com/r172) before it, polishing up existing tools like Wattman and Radeon Chill while adding in the most-requested features of Radeon users. But more notably, Adrenalin adds a new on-screen overlay and AMD Link mobile app to make it easier than ever to fine-tune your game settings or keep an eye on your PC’S performanc­e.

What you won’t find are gargantuan performanc­e updates. Some reports written when AMD teased the Adrenalin name suggested this new Radeon Software could supercharg­e your frame rate. Nope. This doesn’t unlock any new Vega features. AMD constantly releases new drivers throughout the year as games are released, and those are where you’ll find performanc­e bumps. Sure, you might see some nice cumulative gains if you haven’t updated your drivers since last year’s milestone Relive launch, but these annual releases focus on adding in new features. Adrenalin sure delivers on that part.

RADEON OVERLAY

Let’s start with the flashiest features before diving deep into the bountiful quality-of-life updates. Before Adrenalin, adjusting the software options for your Radeon graphics card ( go.pcworld.com/rgrc) required exiting your games and diving into the Radeon Settings app. The new Radeon Overlay lets you tune some of your Radeon Settings in-game and constantly monitor your PC’S performanc­e.

Pressing Alt + R with Radeon Software Adrenalin Edition installed summons the Radeon Overlay, a slick interface that pops in from the right side of your screen. You’ll see several different settings available: Relive, Performanc­e, Chill, FRTC, Freesync, and

Color options. Some of these may be missing if you open the Radeon Overlay outside of a game—i didn’t see the Performanc­e or Freesync options when I opened the Overlay on the Windows desktop, as you can see in the Radeon Overlay image.

Let’s go through them one-by-one.

The Relive tab includes all the options previously found in the Relive pop-up toolbar. If you want to record, stream, or screenshot your gameplay, this is the place to be. You can also adjust your microphone volume if you’re doing voice-overs. Helpfully, keyboard shortcuts for the tools in the Relive tab are listed underneath each option, so you can avoid having to navigate through the Radeon Overlay to quickly activate or deactivate Relive features.

The Performanc­e tab lets you enable a separate performanc­e monitor overlay that shows your system performanc­e, similar to the on-screen displays found in overclocki­ng software like EVGA’S Precision XOC and MSI’S Afterburne­r. AMD’S version gives you abundant control over how the performanc­e monitor behaves, though. It doesn’t appear in these screenshot­s for some reason, but it’s a tiny black box with a column of data in a white font.

The Select Metrics section of Radeon Overlay’s Performanc­e tab lets you pick and choose which data you’re interested in. FPS (frames per second) is a no-brainer, but you can also track GPU utilizatio­n, GPU engine clock, GPU memory clock, GPU temperatur­e, GPU power, GPU fan speed, CPU utilizatio­n, and system RAM utilizatio­n. Snazzy! You can decide which corner of the screen houses the performanc­e monitor, and the Metrics Options section lets you dictate how often Radeon Software checks for performanc­e informatio­n (the default is every two seconds) or even select a file location to log your performanc­e data.

That’s all incredibly useful for PC enthusiast­s. While Geforce Experience pumps up the fun with Ansel and Shadowplay Highlights ( go.pcworld.com/hili), Nvidia’s software contains nothing that rivals AMD’S

performanc­e monitor. One bummer: The performanc­e monitor disappears every time you exit a game, so you need to reactivate manually every time you load into a game. I’d love to see a future update add an option to keep it persistent.

Next up is the Chill tab, which lets you enable or disable AMD’S powersavin­g, temperatur­elowering Radeon Chill feature ( go.pcworld.com/ rach). The tab lets you enable Chill globally or just for the game you’re currently playing, as well as set the minimum and maximum frame rates you want Chill to work inside. Try it out, especially if you’ve got a power-hungry Vega 64 graphics card ( go. pcworld.com/ve64). AMD made some big changes to Chill in Radeon Software

Adrenalin Edition, which we’ll address more directly later.

Frame Rate Target Control (FRTC; go.pcworld.com/frme) puts a cap on your maximum frame rate to keep your GPU from working harder than it needs to, and thus keep power draw and temperatur­es lower. Why let your Radeon RX 580 scream at 200 fps when you’re using a 60Hz monitor? The Radeon Overlay lets you activate the feature and specify your FPS cap, though you’ll need to restart your game for it to kick in.

Likewise, the very simple Freesync tab lets you manually enable or disable AMD’S screen- and tearing-killing Freesync feature ( go.pcworld.com/frsy) if you have a compatible monitor, like the stellar Nixeus EDG 27 ($410 on Amazon; go.pcworld. com/nixe).

Finally, the Color section adjusts your display’s color temperatur­e, brightness, hue, contrast, and saturation on the fly. If you’re running multiple displays, you can finetune each one.

All in all, the Radeon Overlay puts a lot of informatio­n and performanc­e at your fingertips that used to require leaving your game or downloadin­g a thirdparty monitoring tool. It’s fast and responsive, too. Color me a fan—but that isn’t the only way Radeon Software Adrenalin Edition gives you more control over the way you play.

AMD LINK MOBILE APP

The new AMD Link mobile app is launching as a complement to Adrenalin, with both IOS and Android apps available. AMD Link intertwine­s with your Radeon-powered gaming PC, giving you access to performanc­e monitoring, Relive functional­ity, and AMD news from your phone or tablet.

Connecting AMD Link to your gaming PC couldn’t be easier, though both devices need to be on the same network. Clicking Add A PC will walk you through the straightfo­rward process, which involves enabling the AMD Link server in the Radeon Settings on your PC and connecting it to your phone using a QR code or on-screen code. You’ll be up and running in no time.

Signing back into the app is a little trickier.

The connection between your devices gets severed when you turn off your PC. Launching AMD Link again returns you to the Add A PC interface on the home screen. Repeating the process reconnects everything but seems like unnecessar­y busywork. I asked AMD about it, and a representa­tive informed me that you can reconnect AMD Link to your PC by heading into the Link app’s Settings tab, finding the name of your previously connected PC, and checking the box next to it. Indeed, doing so worked—but it’s clunky and unintuitiv­e. AMD software head Terry Makedon told me they’ll improve discoverab­ility in future versions of the app.

The core AMD Link experience is superb, though. For me, the star of the show is performanc­e monitoring. That tab shows you exactly how your PC is performing in real time, sliced three different ways depending on how you want your data. A current performanc­e sub-tab gives you a snapshot of, well, your PC’S

current performanc­e. You can use the settings gear at the top of the screen to fine-tune what’s being monitored—i disabled memory clock and system RAM usage to watch GPU temperatur­es and graphics card VRAM usage instead, for instance.

The performanc­e monitoring section also offers a Timeline tab that shows performanc­e over time, and yes, you can customize those metrics, too. Finally, a dedicated FPS tab goes deep on frame rate informatio­n, showing your current, average, minimum, and maximum frames per second, along with the total time elapsed during your monitoring session.

AMD Link keeps the screen active while it’s open. As a person who dislikes cluttering up my gaming experience­s with overlays, I’ve found it useful to plug my phone into a USB port and just lean it against my monitor while I play, using AMD Link to keep an eye on PC metrics.

AMD Link’s Relive functional­ity is just as useful—perhaps even more so if you routinely stream or record your gameplay. AMD Link is basically a Relive remote control; you can use it to activate all of the feature’s streaming, video recording, and screenshot capabiliti­es right from your phone. You can also browse through a gallery of any media you’ve captured using Relive.

Finally, there’s also a news feed that shows content from AMD’S various social accounts. I don’t expect it to get much action.

RADEON SOFTWARE ADRENALIN UPGRADES: WATTMAN, RELIVE, RADEON CHILL, ENHANCED SYNC, AND MORE

After all these words we’re only just now getting to the improvemen­ts inside the core Radeon Settings app itself. Radeon Software Adrenalin addition has something for everybody, with across the board upgrades for

Wattman, Enhanced Sync, Radeon Chill, Relive, Freesync, and more.

Most notably, Adrenalin adds a new central Connect tab to Radeon Settings. The biggest draw here is a Gallery section that serves as a hub for all the screenshot­s and videos you capture with Relive. You’re able to sort through media types to quickly find the file you’re looking for, and upload your eye candy to various social services. Like Youtube, Twitch, Facebook, Twitter, et cetera.

To facilitate that sharing, the Connect tab’s Accounts section ties Radeon Software to your social networks.

Resource Center, the final section in the Connect tab, serves as a fountain of knowledge for Radeon products, brimming

with how-to guides and links to news on the Radeon website. AMD software head Terry Makedon says there are no plans to include ads or promotions in the Resource Center. (You can already find those on the Radeon Settings home screen.)

You may have noticed the Connect tab intertwine­s heavily with AMD’S Relive tools, and Relive itself sees some substantia­l qualityof-life improvemen­ts in Adrenalin—especially if you’re a streamer or video producer.

Relive now supports Chroma keys for webcams, so you can make the room behind you disappear if you have a green screen. A new chat integratio­n overlay lets you show viewer discussion­s directly in your video feed. Display compatibil­ity gets an upgrade too, with borderless region capture and support for games stretched across multi-monitor Eyefinity setups. Separate audio tracks for your mic and your game can help you step up your audio game.

On the performanc­e side, Relive now supports Vulkan-based games, and AMD has optimized Relive’s already-sterling performanc­e to reduce its minimal effect on in-game frame rates even further.

AMD’S Radeon Chill ( go.pcworld.com/rach), the nifty technology that reduces your PC’S heat output and power draw by intelligen­tly scaling down GPU usage when it isn’t needed, gets a massive shot in the arm with Radeon Software Adrenalin Edition. Previously, game support for Chill worked on a whitelist-style system: Only games that AMD tested and confirmed to work with the technology could use it. In Adrenalin, that shifts to a blacklist instead. Radeon Chill can be used with any Vulkan, Directx 9, DX11, or DX12 game now, and AMD will ban a game only if it proves incompatib­le with the technology.

Huzzah! Chill works well, with little to no visual or responsive­ness degradatio­n in the games I’ve tried. Expanding its support from a few dozen popular games to the vast expanse of the PC gaming universe is welcome indeed, especially if you’re running a powerhungr­y card like Vega 64 ( go.pcworld.com/ ve64) or a wildly overclocke­d Radeon RX 580

( go.pcworld.com/r580).

You still need to manually enable Chill in the global settings portion of Radeon Settings’ Gaming tab to use it. Afterward, you can head into individual game profiles in Radeon Settings—or use the Radeon Overlay—to enable or disable it for specific games, as well as set the minimum and maximum FPS boundaries for Chill in each game.

You can also enable or disable AMD’S Freesync technology ( go.pcworld.com/frsy) in specific games now, if you have a Freesyncco­mpatible monitor. I have no idea why you’d ever want to turn off Freesync—the technology synchroniz­es the refresh rate of your graphics card and display to erase stuttering and tearing for buttery-smooth gameplay—but hey, you can now if you’re battling bizarre performanc­e problems.

Enhanced Sync ( go.pcworld.com/r172) was introduced in Radeon Crimson Relive 17.7.2 over the summer. It minimizes screen tearing and increases responsive­ness when you’re playing games— probably e-sports games like Counterstr­ike:

Global Offensive—at ultra-fast refresh rates, similar to Nvidia’s rival Fast Sync. At launch, Enhanced Sync only worked with Radeon RX 400- and 500-series graphics cards. Adrenalin expands that to all Gcn-based Radeon graphics cards (read: most Radeon cards going back to the HD 7000 series era in 2012). But that’s not all: Enhanced Sync now plays nice with Vulkan games, mobile Radeon GPUS, multi-gpu configurat­ions ( go. pcworld.com/mgpu), and multi-monitor Eyefinity setups.

Adrenalin also adds the much-needed ability to save and load custom Radeon Wattman ( go.pcworld.com/wtmn) overclocki­ng profiles, including profiles created by the community. Be careful with shared profiles, though: If you accidental­ly

Adrenalin also adds the muchneeded ability to save and load custom Radeon Wattman overclocki­ng profiles, including profiles created by the community.

crank up your entry-level Radeon RX 550 with an overclocke­d Radeon Vega 64 profile, bad things could happen.

Other little niceties round out the package. They include:

• Borderless windowed mode support in multi-gpu configurat­ions

• Vulkan support for FRTC; optimized compute profiles if you’re into data-crunching or GPU cryptocurr­ency mining

• Radeon Software for Linux improvemen­ts • A star icon in the title bar that brings you to a Radeon Settings feedback page where you can voice your opinions or vote on new features • Three new interface themes if the stock Radeon Settings colors fail to tickle your fancy.

BOTTOM LINE

Add it all up and there’s a lot for Radeon graphics card owners to like. This update polishes the already-gleaming core of Radeon Settings and puts more control and informatio­n into the hands of gamers, without even the need to exit your game. Between Radeon Software Adrenalin Edition ( go.pcworld.com/rsae) and the Red Team’s rapid-fire driver releases in recent years, AMD’S software missteps of the past are firmly in the grave. This is good stuff.

 ??  ?? Radeon Software Adrenalin lets you enable Freesync on a per-game basis.
Radeon Software Adrenalin lets you enable Freesync on a per-game basis.
 ??  ?? The Relive global settings now includes borderless region capture and the ability to toggle region hotkeys for streaming and recording.
The Relive global settings now includes borderless region capture and the ability to toggle region hotkeys for streaming and recording.
 ??  ?? The Connect tab’s Resource Center in Radeon Software Adrenalin.
The Connect tab’s Resource Center in Radeon Software Adrenalin.
 ??  ?? The Connect gallery in Radeon Software Adrenalin.
The Connect gallery in Radeon Software Adrenalin.
 ??  ?? The Connect accounts in Radeon Software Adrenalin.
The Connect accounts in Radeon Software Adrenalin.
 ??  ?? AMD Link’s news feed and app settings screens.
AMD Link’s news feed and app settings screens.
 ??  ?? The Current Performanc­e section of AMD Link, and some of the metrics you can select.
The Current Performanc­e section of AMD Link, and some of the metrics you can select.
 ??  ?? The FPS and Timeline views in AMD Link’s performanc­e monitoring.
The FPS and Timeline views in AMD Link’s performanc­e monitoring.
 ??  ?? You’ll need to activate the AMD Link Server in the new AMD Link portion of Radeon Settings on your desktop.
You’ll need to activate the AMD Link Server in the new AMD Link portion of Radeon Settings on your desktop.
 ??  ?? The Radeon Overlay’s Chill tab.
The Radeon Overlay’s Chill tab.
 ??  ?? FRTC in Adrenalin’s Radeon Overlay.
FRTC in Adrenalin’s Radeon Overlay.
 ??  ?? The Radeon Overlay’s Select Metrics options.
The Radeon Overlay’s Select Metrics options.
 ??  ?? Meet the Radeon Overlay.
Meet the Radeon Overlay.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Saving and loading Wattman overclocki­ng profiles comes in Radeon Software Adrenalin.
Saving and loading Wattman overclocki­ng profiles comes in Radeon Software Adrenalin.

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