Cheap New GeForce 8800 GT Challenges $400 Cards 402
J. Dzhugashvili writes "What would you say to a video card that performs like a $400 GeForce 8800 GTS for $200-250? Say hello to the GeForce 8800 GT. The Tech Report has tested the new mid-range wonder in Crysis, Unreal Tournament 3, Team Fortress 2, and BioShock. It found that the card keeps up with its $400 big brother overall while drawing significantly less power and — here's the kicker — generating slightly less noise."
$200-250 is NOT cheap! (Score:5, Insightful)
You want to impress me? Show me a $50-100 video card that can perform as well as a $200. $50 falls into something I call 'cheap'.
Re:$200-250 is NOT cheap! (Score:5, Insightful)
The same complaint you've just made can be made for -all- computer components. The high-end ($400) stuff -is- insanely expensive, and only for the true die-hard hobbyists. The hobbyist ($200) stuff is for those that want to enjoy the sport, but can't afford to throw their money away. And the cheap stuff ($100) is for those that don't really care and the low-end stuff is good enough.
If you're not a gamer, you have -no- reason to buy a card at all. The onboard video is more than good enough. (I use an onboard Intel GMA 3000 on my Kubuntu box and it runs Compiz better than my ATI at work.)
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Re:$200-250 is NOT cheap! (Score:5, Informative)
CPUs: 5 years ago, ~$1k was top, ~$300 mid-line, ~$125 low-end. Today, same.
HD: 5 years ago, ~$700 was top, ~$200 mid-line, ~$80 low-end. Today, same, maybe a bit lower.
RAM: 5 years ago, ~$500 was top, ~$200 mid-line, ~$100 low-end. Today, same, maybe a bit lower.
Video: 5 years ago, ~$400 was top, ~$150 mid-line, ~$50 low-end. Today, it's gone up. ~$700 top, ~$300 mid-line, ~$100 low-end.
However, I would argue against the OP: From a market standpoint the reason video card pricing has increased is because the customers are more willing to spend more on a video card than the other components. Certainly GPUs have increased in complexity to where they've equaled or surpassed CPUs in circuits thus increasing manufacturing costs, but ATI and nVidia wouldn't have pushed GPUs to that point if the public weren't willing to buy them. It leaves the folks who can only afford a $150 video card feeling as if they have a smaller penis because the high-end is now $700 instead of $400. But as you point out, any low end card out today would smoke the high-end cards from 5 years ago.
Now if we can just get the game developers to write code which will run at acceptable FPS on mid- to low-end video hardware...
Re:$200-250 is NOT cheap! (Score:5, Insightful)
It may seem simple, and is not a "sport" in the sense that it doesn't require physical stamina, however in the pro leagues it does require a significant amount of time to train. How do you train with a video game? Getting the timing of a weapon down just right in CS...knowing EXACTLY what units to use and where to use them depending on the type of attack/types of units your opponent is using...you get the idea. Basically, it requires you to know the game better than the people that made it. Not only that, but you must have the dexterity in your fingers to be able to control as well as possible (it is also not uncommon for pro gamers to play some form of instrument that requires dexterity, such as Saxophone or Guitar.)
Try playing SSBM or CS:S against someone who regularly plays in tournaments and trains on a daily basis...see how long you last.
And while you are laughing at them for being nerds, they are making a shitload of money for doing what essentially amounts to playing games for a living.
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They do their job, and in return they can pay their bills, put a roof over their head, and put food in the pantry...
Isn't that why you work?
Re:$200-250 is NOT cheap! (Score:5, Insightful)
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Entertainment and advertising have value to someone, not necessarily you or I, but much of the money moving through these sectors is coming from someone who does.
Also, not everyone can do something mentally or spiritually rewarding. Not everyone can be special. Shit, if anyone could make a living doing what they really wanted to
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Sports vs. Games (Score:3, Insightful)
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Tiger Woods doesn't hit 300+ yard tee shots because he was simply walking a fairway for 72 holes a day. He also doesn't make the majority of his money off of the game/sport of golf.
Likewise, professional gamers do train for their "sport" and, if they are lucky, they earn most of their money from endorsements.
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Why would you pity them? Most professional (professional being the key word here) strippers/dancers/prostitutes know that what they do is a form of entertainment. And I really wouldn't pity them, as they have A LOT more power and control over the men & women who are watching them to feed their inner animal.
Many women I have spoken to who peddle flesh for a living know that they call the shots, and quite a few of them make a
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Though I think 'professional gaming' is silly, there are lots of 'sports' that are not particularly athletic, and/or are more about use of certain specialized equipment than about innate physical characteristics. So that's not really a legitimate criticism.
There are almost purely athletic sports (running, perhaps, the most pure), and there are very skill-based sports (fishing, shooting, bowling, bocce, etc.), and of course a whole lot in between. P
Re:$200-250 is NOT cheap! (Score:4, Informative)
Nuff said.
Re:$200-250 is NOT cheap! (Score:5, Insightful)
I spend 250 dollars for a night out at a nice restaurant with my wife, especially if a nice bottle of wine is included.
Wh wouldn't I spend this on a one time purchase that will provide hours and hours of entertainment for up to 1.5 years?
Re:$200-250 is NOT cheap! (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:$200-250 is NOT cheap! (Score:5, Funny)
Well, for starters, there's the fact that you already spent it all for a night out at a nice restaurant.
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You can say the same thing about 8MB of ram, and computers 10 or 15 years ago, and even the first CD-ROM drives. I was an early adopter of 4X CD burner long before CD burners became mainstream and it cost me $600. Do I regret it? No because I knew thats the price you pay for early adoption and paying off R&D and research into new more efficient manufacturing processes.
A "video card" is a highly complicated specialized CPU, maybe you should look into t
Re:$200-250 is NOT cheap! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:$200-250 is NOT cheap! (Score:5, Insightful)
Kicker (Score:4, Insightful)
Obviously, the fan is making the noise, not the chip.
I bet you could probably find a 8800GTX with some high-end silent cooling rig.
Re:Kicker (Score:5, Interesting)
Weird.
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Help me understand. (Score:4, Interesting)
The only thing I can think of is that the production costs were higher for the GTS, resulting in less profit per card...
Can anyone clue me in?
Re:Help me understand. (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:Help me understand. (Score:5, Insightful)
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do you really think that the 8800gtx will still be nvidia's top-of-the-line card come Christmas?
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This way, early adopters don't feel like they got screwed into mild feature obsolecense by a card that costs half as much, people wanting the upgrades see more reason to b
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ATI could also announce the All-In-Wonder 3000HFHD! (*Ho
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It's hard to imagine they're m
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You win some, you lose some, especially when you're buying the top of the line.
Early adopter.. (Score:2)
Re:Help me understand. (Score:4, Interesting)
Meh, I'm unconvinced SLI is anything more than markting hot-rods to idiots. I think this is like the dual 3dfx Voodoo Monster II all over again. If the next generation cards can do in a single slot what todays cards need two or more in SLI for, then 99% of consumers will just wait for the next card, and only the twits who need/want the bragging rights of an SLI unit will go for it.
I doubt any games are ever going to require an SLI setup.
In any case think back to the 3dfx monster stuff and recall how that panned out. Instead of everyone needing an array of video cards to run the latest games the entire dual card thing was rendered obsolete because a single next gen card could beat a dual monster setup for half the price.
And look at whats happening in CPU's... virtually nobody has a quad socket motherboard; and even dual sockets are a rare niche product. Yet we've had support for it on the desktop since 2000. But instead the trend has been to multi-core cpu's. The cost benefit just isn't there for multiple socket cpus or multiple card video solutions. However, if they can do "SLI on a single board"... that will be your next generation solution.
My 0.02 on the subject...
Re:Help me understand. (Score:4, Insightful)
Do you realize what the alternative is?
Who the heck is buying these cards? (Score:2, Insightful)
Even at 'only' $250, it's that or a Wii. And the Wii is a stable platform, whereas your cutting edge premium card is going to look overpriced and behind the curve tomorrow - ask all the people who just ordered $400 8800 GTS cards how that feels.
Come on, own up: who's buying these console-priced cards, and why?
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There's basically two kinds of people who buy $400 graphics cards. People who have so much money it's chump change, and people for whom PC gaming is their big hobby. For either of those groups, it's really not that much money. Think about it. The best gaming rig in the world still won't top $10K (and that's going REALLY off-the-wall extreme) which is peanuts compared to some hobbies. And you can build a really good gaming rig that has pretty much all of the best-of-the-best including a $400 graph
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Same people who stood in line the first day to plunk down $699 on an iPhone.
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I buy video cards and computers for gaming because the console hasn't tackled my kind of game - at least not well yet - the MMORPG. Till then, it's computer gaming for me.
(and besides, the computer hardware doubles as a development platform - I do engineering programming and hardware-accelerated visualization. That card comes in handy. I really can't do that on a Wii)
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Re:Who the heck is buying these cards? (Score:5, Insightful)
Come on, own up: who's buying these console-priced cards, and why?
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Once you've got a decent system together (mine's based around a mildly OCed e6750), then you've got to ask yourself if you'd rather pay the $200-400 for a console, or for a video card to turn your computer into a better gaming sy
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Kind of like audiophiles, but with technical competence and objective benchmarking tools.
I dunno, I always thought the "max res, max AA, max framerate" crowd was more akin to dB drag racers [wikipedia.org] than audiophiles.
Huh. That's a good phrase: "FPS drag racers"
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Don't get me wrong, Wii is a nice little console, but it looked behind the curve in its launch date, and it looks behind the curve today. I don't understand why fanboys have to troll everything; we are comparing PC video cards here, why are you talking about the Wii?
A year ago I bought this laptop with a GeForce 7900 and have been pl
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What makes it next generation isn't the power, it is the usability. I still play more games on my computer (P4ht/3.2ghz w/7600gt) than I do the Wii, but the CONTROL on the Wii, and the controllers, are absolutely the best. The Wii isn't more powerful than even my old computer, but the gaming EXPERIENCE is much better.
As an old fart who games a fair amount, I would say that the games on PC are more realistic, but playing on the
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Who is buying Wii-Priced games anyway?
If i buy one game a month, the card will have paid for itself.
Not to mention that for Wii-like games, intel integrated graphics would be plenty.
Can you Luddites find a new site please? (Score:5, Insightful)
Quit hating just because you can't afford the newest toys. If someone can and if that's what they want, then great. You should be happy because guess what? That's where the Wii graphics come from. Lower end graphics come from higher end graphics. It costs a lot of money to develop new technology like this, and the high end is where the development cost gets reimbursed. You get the cheap, good graphics in the Wii precisely because ATi has done so much high end development and it has filtered down.
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In these cards, quality is often favoured above speed.
I also wondered, why do gamers try to get frame rates higher than their screen's refresh rate? I always found having a smooth and consistent framerate, than having it run flat out at 400fps on simple scenes and slow down to 100 in complex frames was much easier to play with. I used to play quake on an SGI, which capped the framerate to 60 i bel
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I just bought a Dell XPS in a package deal that included a high-end graphics card. I don't own a console or play console games because I hate the controllers, the resulting UI, and I don't usually play the kinds of games that consoles offer (and first person shooters are far superior on a PC with a mouse to aim with). So, the console "option" is irrelevant to me. If I can play my games with the graphics settings cranked and see no performance loss, and I know my system will be cutting edge for years, the
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Come on, own up: who's buying these console-priced cards, and why?
Simply stated, lesser cards will not drive high resolution displays (1600, 1920, etc) at high, stable frame rates without washing out the visuals by turning features off or down.
Lots of people (myself included) get a huge amount of entertainment from PC gaming. This level of entertainment is often related to the performance of the machine. If you are crawling along Oblivion (just as an example) at 20 fps, you a
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<jest>
Man, you sound like a person that would waste $50 a month for cable modem when you can get perfectly good internet over the phone line for less than $10. Or might spend $20,000 on a car when you can take the bus for $1. Or pay $4 for a drink at the nightclub when you just buy a six pack and stay at home. Whats next? Blowing money to eat at a restaurant when you could have just made a peanut butter san
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I bought a $300 video card in the past. And I bought a Wii. So I guess I fit both groups.
But the thing is that I bought that $300 video card 3 years ago and I still use it today. I expect to get another year of life out of it so that would bring service to 4 years. If I had not bought the video card, I probably would have found myself upgrading multiple times over those years. That would probably mean a $100 or more card at the same time I bought the $300 card and another investment about a year and a h
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Can you outline why? What are the concrete benefits of a 8800 GTS over an 8800 GT for any of those users?
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Supposedly the next version of After Effects will use it to demo effects but does not use it for rendering the real thing that will be broadcast.
Now Graphics. that one is plai
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I worked at a newspaper for a while, and they had a number of Pagemaker 7.5 machines running with some really lousy on-board graphics that were sold as "High-Spec" by the con artist offering tech support for the place for years previously. It took me bringing in my old
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Cheap my ass (Score:2)
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FWIW, the reccomended $100 card performs better than my card that cost $200 two years ago (6600 GT).
Yup (Score:4, Funny)
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In other words, if you play PC games at 1600x1200 or above, this is the only choice that you really have now - nothing else makes sense unless you're playing on a 30" monitor or want
Worth upgrading my GeForce 7950 on my box? (Score:3, Informative)
My current computer specifications can be found here:
http://alpha.zimage.com/~ant/antfarm/about/computers.txt [zimage.com] (I do not like to and want to OC; doesn't help when I have physical disabilities since I can't open my case to reset CMOS, fiddle with the hardwares, etc.). I use the latest NVIDIA drivers (including betas), 1280x1024 native resolution on my 19" LCD monitor (helps to use lower native resolutions since I don't need larger one
Is it worth getting a newer video card (e.g., 8800) to help the newer games' FPS like Crysis, World in Conflict, C&C3 (not too choppy like the first two), etc.? I do not want to upgrade my motherboard, CPU, RAM, etc. at this time. I am not sure where's the bottleneck is. Video card? My CPU? Something else?
Thank you in advance.
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Crysis might not be very pretty on Lowest settings here on my Radeon X800GTO, but it's definitely nice to be able to have a steady and very playable framerate at my native 1440x900 resolution. Have you even tried Medium? Not so pretty game I can actually play is much more entertaining than slideshow of amazing renders I can't really do a whole lot with comfortably. Really my main complaint with Lowest settings is that the grass gets in the way more than anything, especially since there's no FSAA/AF that I'm
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Oooh yes, I hate those blocky pixels especially with low resolutions!
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Maybe so (Score:5, Funny)
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I also have some Elsa Gloria cards, i got one with an alphastation a few years ago.
Pedestrian.. (Score:2)
Overkill? (Score:3, Interesting)
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Then you realize two things:
a) you have seen movies with worse graphics
b) there is no graphic hardware in the world that can enable all details.
Just like in the sweet old times. All those cards running the latest games at 200fps gets boring once in a while...
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price != quality (Score:2)
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The Anantech review [anandtech.com] details things much, much better (unsurprisingly).
Installing in a Mac Pro? (Score:2)
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Afaict you can put a card with a PC bios in and it will work in windows but it won't work in the bootloader or OS-X.
why buy a desktop machine that's upgradable if you can't upgrade it?
Lets see, the mac pro is the cheapest mac (the xserve can do some of theese things too but it is even more expensive than the mac pro) that
* supports a matched pair of monitors of your choice (the mini doesn't support multiple monitors at all,
Nice looking card (Score:5, Informative)
1. Single slot cooler instead of a dual slot like all the other high end cards made over the last 2 years
2. One 6 pin power connection instead of two like all the other high end G80 cards
3. Power consumption. According to the article (yes I read it), Nvidia rates the power consumption of the 8800GT at 110 watts.
4. Supports PCI Express 2.0 (backwards compatible with PCI Express 1.1)
5. Relatively cheap. I always found $200-300 to be the best price range for a video card (the high end G80 cards on the other hand cost $500-800 [newegg.com])
Does it have dual link dvi HDCP? 8800 GTX did not! (Score:3, Informative)
Which really boils down to one thing.... and its not entirely nvidia's fault. Its this entire HDCP DRM encryption mentality. This is EXACTLY what happens to consumers when these huge corporations impose such unfriendly, incompatible schemes on us. I paid for the best video card at the time, and it was $600, Nvidia said it supported HDCP and was ready for Vista. BOTH... were lies.
$200? Where? (Score:3, Insightful)
So much for the return of the midrange. Midrange being the $150 card. Today's $150 card ie the 8600gts is a joke for DX10 and the newest games. No wonder the PC gaming industry is in the shitter and losing out to consoles. You need to spend almost $300 on a video card just to stay current.
When fast new systems with Dual Core cpus, 1GB of memory, and 19" LCDs, cost $500-$600 who in their right mind thinks spending $250 on a gpu isn't a ripoff?
Double Precision Floating Point Support? (Score:3, Interesting)
(the reviews I have seen have been far less technical on new chip features than in previous graphics card launches).