Read more.Custom MSI Gaming Z, Duke, Armour, and Aero designs become available from 17th Nov.
Read more.Custom MSI Gaming Z, Duke, Armour, and Aero designs become available from 17th Nov.
I'll be interested to see how this performs. I did see a price of around £560 quoted by an employee at OCuk a while back on their forum. Strong money for a card that I some how doubt will have exactly "stellar" performance. Nvidia certainly seem to have our nuts in a vice these days!
Live long and prosper.
I wouldn't say that. I did price / performance comparisons on my Vega 64 to see if I'd made the right call and, whilst performance isn't quite as good as to 1080Ti it's perfectly fine for 1440P and the priceerformance ratio (using aggregated benchmarks) is exactly the same. Comparing again aggregated benches of the 1080Ti and the 2080 (not Ti) gives you practically identical performance with a much higher cost for the new card.
Therefore, unless you're gaming at 4K, the Vega 64 is a perfectly sensible buy (or it was when I got it, I haven't looked up the latest prices).
Exactly why I went and bought an MSI 1080 Ti gaming (rather than one of the new RTX cards) from OCuk a couple of weeks back when they were on offer at £599. That will do me fine for the next couple of years at 1440p (obviously a G-sync monitor helps).
I tend to also agree that the AMD card you mention is also a viable alternative.
I was more trying to get at the current price/performance of the latest RTX cards from Nvidia. Putting aside the new toys offered (maybe at some point even implemented effectively in games) I just can't see the point of buying an RTX card myself at the moment. If anyone wants to go Nvidia, I would tend to say "wait for the next gen". Obviously only my personal opinions here and up to every individual how they spend their money of course.
Live long and prosper.
Honestly, I expect it'll do you longer than that, especially with G-sync. The lack of any major increase in FPS in games with the latest cards will only increase the lifespan of the last generation and on top of that I don't think we're going to see ray tracing become anywhere near mainstream in the life of the Turing card. Combine that with console graphics cards holding things back as they do and I seriously expect that the console updates will wait until cards that can do ray tracing properly are available to them before any major refresh. Thus I expect we're looking at a lull in GPU requirements and I thoroughly expect my card to last me 4 years as long as it doesn't either deafen me or cook itself in the mean time.
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