AMD’s Smart Access Memory (SAM) tech, which boosts performance and helps games run faster – some titles more than others – is now available to folks who don’t have one of AMD’s newest 500 series motherboards, at least in unofficial beta form.
SAM has only just come into play and requires you to have one of AMD’s new Big Navi graphics cards and a new Ryzen 5000 processor, and the other stipulation was having a new 500 series motherboard.
There was some concern that AMD might keep SAM exclusive to these new components as an incentive to upgrade, but the good news is this isn’t the case, and those with last-gen X470 and B450 motherboards will – and in some cases, can now – benefit from the tech. (Incidentally, SAM will also be coming to owners of Intel CPUs and Nvidia GPUs eventually, as we recently found out).
SAM allows the CPU to get full access to GPU memory, lifting memory restrictions in order to give a decent performance boost (some games can benefit to the tune of 10%, others more like 5% – so it’s certainly a worthwhile bit of tweaking). The downside is it’s not trivial to get SAM working, and it involves playing around in the BIOS, which not everyone will be comfortable doing (as we discuss in our Radeon RX 6800 review).
Only certain X470 and B450 motherboards are supported right now, in beta form, and if yours is one of them, you will need to ensure that you grab the BIOS update that brings in AGESA v2 1.1.0.0.
If you want to run a Ryzen 5000 processor – which as mentioned is a required component for SAM – you’ll need to upgrade to AGESA v2 1.1.0.0 anyway, as this is necessary for a Zen 3 chip.
Unofficial release
Supported motherboards with the requisite beta BIOS updates include ASRock with its B450 boards, and Gigabyte with support for X470 and B450 boards. Remember that these are unofficial updates, though, so as ever with beta firmware, apply at your own risk.
MSI has also rolled out support for X470 and B450 motherboards to testers at this point, but is waiting for the official AGESA firmware release which is expected to arrive in January 2021 before rolling out to customers. Asus has an AGESA 1.1.8.0 firmware with SAM support, but again this is beta, and indeed not supposed to be released to the public – AMD has confirmed as much, and the official line is to wait for the aforementioned official release in January.
That’s only a couple of months away, of course, and that might give you time to actually find a Big Navi graphics card and/or Ryzen 5000 CPU to buy, because right now, they are thin on the ground to say the least.
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November 27, 2020 at 08:08PM
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AMD shows Intel how it’s done by bringing its most exciting tech to older motherboards - TechRadar
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