Author Topic: what is your favorate GPU? and what is your main GPU?  (Read 6390 times)

eh alot of people are having GTX's

shadow play is probably the main reason i got nvidia

My favorite GPU that I've never used is probably the 1080 ti, but my current GPU which is a 1070 FE looks and performs great, can run any game on Ultra and get 60+ FPS so I don't think I'll ever need a 1080 anyways.

shadow play is probably the main reason i got nvidia
Funny, for me Shadow Play just stopped working so now I have OBS, and while it's a bit complicated to setup once it's sorted out it's worth.

Really if a graphics card can play Dark Souls 3 at 60fps its a good card

Well yeah, generally Nvidia cards perform much better than AMD cards
false
AMD cards work best with AMD CPUs and Nvidia GPUs work best with Intel CPUs, and Intel CPUs are more popular than AMD.
also false


does someone here actually have an nvidia shield?

wait why?
in 1070-1080 territory as of right now thats true, but in 1060 and 1050 Ti territory however, that isnt true

usually AMD cards work best with AMD CPUs and Nvidia GPUs work best with Intel CPUs
what the forget no bro

Well yeah, generally Nvidia cards perform much better than AMD cards, and they're more popular with the crowd and usually AMD cards work best with AMD CPUs and Nvidia GPUs work best with Intel CPUs, and Intel CPUs are more popular than AMD.

Also my old GPU was an integrated GPU on the Intel Celeron 2.7GHz CPU.
fake news

I have a GeForce GTX 960 4gb Vram,  It's eh...


I might get a 1070 or 1080 but thats money...

Normally I'd be ripping apart Snaked, but he's not entirely wrong. Not on the first count, at least.

NVIDIA have historically always targeted the high performance crowd. Their GeForce 3 (IIRC) almost decimated all other competition for about 3 - 4 years in late 90s/early 00s, and its their reputation which has led to market domination and thus more resources to sink into producing the better quality tech, hence why their cards generally come out on top as they can afford better R&D. AMD's acquisition of ATi means they found themselves eating up a lot of the mid and low end consumer market (of course, having to compete with Intel). They have less R&D cash to play with, so they have to be smarter; what you'll notice is a lot of AMD trying to be smart and quirky (Mantle), but NVIDIA will come out with a much better implementation of what they attempted to do, if they think there's value in it.

While the data available usually lags a couple generations behind, you'll find that NVIDIA's cards have a (slightly) lower failure rate and a longer life expectancy with their comparable AMD equivalent, and this makes senses with the above facts.



As for the idea of their being "better" CPU+GPU combinations...eh? Sort of, not really. Most GPU relations are handled by the driver set, which is all software and thus you'd be better of complaining about Microsoft/Apple/Free Software Foundation (and the various vendors for each distribution). The one component you might be thinking of is that in new architecture, the old Northbridge/Southbridge combo (which handles communication between all the parts of a PC and the CPU) are now directly integrated into the CPU (called the System Agent for Intel, not sure the AMD equivalent). Honestly though, you would think if that were the case, then your RAM, HDD and USB components would also be suffering because they're not NVIDIA/AMD branded.

980 TI reference, my favorite and also what I have in use.

i have a msi gtx 970, solid card



and it just made a new friend

but can it get 60fps in blighttown

that reminds me, did any of you claim your settlement money for the gtx 970 vram lawsuit thing?