AMD has placed its RDNA 1 and RDNA 2 Windows GPU drivers into maintenance mode, sparking concerns among users. However, the company clarified that game optimizations will continue. Linux gamers remain unaffected due to separate driver development paths.
AMD's decision to shift its RDNA 1 (RX 5000 series) and RDNA 2 (RX 6000 series) Windows GPU drivers into maintenance mode initially confused the gaming community. The announcement suggested reduced support, but AMD later confirmed that both architectures would still receive game optimizations. This move applies only to Windows, leaving Linux users untouched.
Phoronix verified that AMD's Linux driver development operates independently from its Windows strategy. On Linux, support for AMD GPUs, including older generations like GCN 1.2 (such as the R9 390X and R9 Fury X), is maintained through long-term kernel drivers and open-source collaboration. This model ensures resilience, as community efforts continue regardless of AMD's proprietary Windows updates.
A key change in the Linux ecosystem occurred on September 15, 2025, when AMD discontinued its AMDVLK Vulkan driver. It has been replaced by RADV, a community-driven implementation that outperforms AMDVLK in most cases. RADV receives backing from major players including Valve, Google, and Red Hat, and AMD has officially endorsed it for all ongoing Linux GPU development and maintenance.
This separation highlights the structural differences: Windows relies on AMD-controlled updates, while Linux distributes responsibility across the open-source community. As a result, Linux gamers face no disruptions from the Windows policy shift, with robust support preserved through RADV and broader ecosystem contributions.