GeForce FX 5200 Reviewed 180
EconolineCrush writes "Tech Report has a great in-depth review of NVIDIA's budget GeForce FX 5200, which brings full DirectX 9 support down to an amazing sub-$70 price point. Any budget graphics card capable of running NVIDIA's gorgeous Dawn is impressive on its own, but when put under the microscope, the GeForce FX 5200 looks more like an exercise in marketing spin than a real revolution for budget graphics cards."
Hovercraft (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hovercraft (Score:3, Informative)
This thing sounds like a hovercraft when you turn on the PC.
From the article:
However, for average consumers and business users, the GeForce FX 5200 offers better multimonitor software, more future-proof feature compatibility, and silent and reliable passive cooling.
It's amazing what actually reading the review on the product you know nothing about will do for you.
Re:Hovercraft (Score:2)
FX (Score:4, Funny)
The Monkey Pages [lazyslacker.com]: Not just another personal site...okay, so I lie.
Re:FX (Score:1)
Re:FX george foreman Igrill (Score:2, Funny)
God my friends will never let me down for falling for that one...
Re:FX george foreman Igrill (Score:2)
back in my day we didn't have no fancy USB connections for our George Foreman. All we had was a orang light and a 120v power adapter. The light would go on and off randomly but we didn't know why. However, we were confidant that it served as an important indicator to someone somewhere. We didnt have no sissy computer controlled timers and
A waste but still cheap. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:A waste but still cheap. (Score:2)
http://www6.tomshardware.com/graphic/20030311/g
THeir conclusion was the 5200 was good for the price, but questionable if it would really be able to keep up with DX9 games when they became available.
Just to meet a release schedule? (Score:5, Interesting)
-A.M.
Surprise, surprise. (Score:3, Insightful)
THINK!
If the low end was worth the PCB is was printed on, there goes the market for the higher-end (and higher-margin) stuff.
Re:Surprise, surprise. (Score:2)
For God's sake (Score:4, Insightful)
It's a budget card.
No leaps and bounds in terms of graphics card techonology progress will be found, otherwise, it wouldn'b be a budget card.
Besides, they have to put a product out, so that they keep customer awareness on their products and not on ATI's, considering how the latest NVIDIA flagship product performs...
Re:For God's sake (Score:3, Insightful)
NVidia's redheaded stepchild card whups new card! (Score:2)
Of course, my flagship box has the Ti4200...mmmm, antialiasing 'til the cows come home...sweet....
Probable reason for the performance hit (Score:4, Informative)
It's a good measure, but it invaribly means that you'll get lagging performance with these low-end cards, so it's something to be careful of. Maybe in a year or so, once shaders become the norm in games, perhaps Moore's law^3 will have enabled them to put those transistors back on and still hit their price target, but definitely not now.
Re:Probable reason for the performance hit (Score:2)
No matter how good your programmable shading hardware is, nothing beats implementing something in hardwired silicon, and since the FF pipeline is still used in 90+% of all apps and game rendering, it makes sense to make the common case as fast as possible...
DirectX 9? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:DirectX 9? (Score:4, Informative)
Did I miss something ? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Did I miss something ? (Score:4, Insightful)
The other indicators were: craphics cards that need external power plugs and graphics cards that need more than one slotplug for its cooler fan.
Fans, anyway, are the work of the devil and the main reason why computers are driving me nuts these days.
Re:Did I miss something ? (Score:2)
Interestingly, nVidia claimed that the new cards included 3Dfx technology, hence the FX moniker. I sill like the Voodoo 5 better.
Why? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Why? (Score:1, Funny)
Even better: I can build a decent computer for my girlfriend who wants to do word processing and doesn't care about 3D graphics, using an even cheaper graphics card that provides even better signal quality and get laid for the favor. What porn movie can compete with that?
Re:Why? (Score:2, Funny)
You have to build your girlfriend a computer to get laid?
Re:Why? (Score:1)
Re:Why? (Score:2)
On that note, would anyone mind converting this vid. to mpeg? All that fancy hardware FX, DX9 stuff is great...but ultimately it's still just a movie. 30 frames per second, and some standard of resolution and pixel depth. So could someone do this, and maybe link an FTP download?
I'd just like to see the demo...cause it...looks nice
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Last generation is better (Score:5, Informative)
Toms Hardware Bribe? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Last generation is better (Score:1, Informative)
If you don't need the very best in image quality enhancements, can do without DirectX 9 and are happy with 2x FSAA, you'll be glad to hear that there's a very affordable card out there for you - the GeForce 4 Ti 4200
NVIDIA's product naming is very confusing (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously.. what average person would know that an a Geforce 3 TI200 was better than a Geforce 4 MX400. I mean.. geforce 4 sound better, right?
Likewise, who would think that an "old" Geforce 4 TI4200 is way better than a new Geforce FX 5200.
Please, NVIDIA, can you come up with some names that actually convey to people whether they're buying the 'Value' version of your graphics card, or the 'Professional/Platinum' version.
Re:NVIDIA's product naming is very confusing (Score:2, Informative)
The FX5200 being slower than the GF4 Ti series, well... that's not too suprising; the lowest-end of the new technology doesn't need to be faster than the highest end of
I blame the game industry (Score:2)
I could forgive this is if the gaming industry would include suggested resolution, bit-depth, etc for each game. Say I have a GF3 TI200 and want to play some new game. I don't want to screw around with the settings to get the game to a FPS/Color combo that is usable, the game should tell me this by looking at my GPU and CPU combo.
Now release this information publically and people shopping around for
Re:I blame the game industry (Score:2)
Some games do; at least, they do some quick benchmarks and suggest that. If nothing else, they usually offer "Fast, Better, Best" quality settings so you don't have to do too much tweaking.
A wizard that did some simple tradeoffs wouldn't be too hard. Make it downloadable and people could get an idea of how well the game would run on their system. Of course, a lot of times the game companies wa
I'd rather get the new ATI cards, though. (Score:3, Informative)
Chances are pretty good that Doom III, EverQuest II, and a good number of other "hot" games coming out for the
Slightly off about DoomIII (Score:3, Informative)
Errr, actually
Mr Carmack himself is a large OpenGL fan. Additionally he openly questions those who rely on MSFT's DirectX too much. This is probably the reason why most (if not all) of his games have native linux ports.
Sunny Dubey
Re:Last generation is better (Score:3, Insightful)
I found that those small GPU fans produce the most noise (and with the highest frequency) in my work PCs, so I am not going to buy any fan-cooled GPU. FX 5200 is the only modern option I know of that does not have fan, so it is on my list if I ever decide to upgrade my GeForce MX 200 (which works fine given I don't play games much).
Re:Last generation is better - NO FANS (Score:2)
Not worth the price, unless want/need DX9 features (Score:4, Interesting)
Btw, I am selling my GF 4 4200 card. I am happy with my GF2 MX. I stopped playing games, no really, I did.
Re:Not worth the price, unless want/need DX9 featu (Score:2)
Re:Not worth the price, unless want/need DX9 featu (Score:2)
Not worth the price?? (Score:1)
I knew I was planning on upgrading. Just didn't know when.
Anyways, several months pass by, and I'm happy with my built-in video card. that is, untill I see my cousin's card, a
Re:Not worth the price?? (Score:2)
Wow! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Wow! (Score:3, Funny)
To put it in Nethack terms, think of it as an "uncursed +1 card of videoing"...
Re:Wow! (Score:3, Funny)
Falcon's Eye (Score:2)
joe,killed by a wraith called joe, while helpless
Bottom line question... (Score:5, Interesting)
Dells only have the top quality cards... (Score:3, Informative)
Check out this gaming machine:
http://www.dell.com/us/en/gen/topics/segtopic_dim
Brian
Re:Dells only have the top quality cards... (Score:2)
I call bullsh-t [resellerratings.com].
Their use of non-standard power supplies [upgradinga...ingpcs.com] alone is reason to shun Dell.
Re:Bottom line question... (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course, if you are going to be buying Maya in the first place, you might as well get the high-end Quadro, since it only costs a few hundred dollars as opposed to Maya at $2000 or $7000.
Re:Bottom line question... (Score:5, Funny)
I am setting up a l33t Maya workstation on my parent's Compaq Presario, but performance sux0rs. Where can I download teh warez version of this "Quadro"?
RivaTuner (Score:2)
Yes, if you have a Ti-series card (Actually some Quadros were MX-based), you can "warez" a Quadro out of it with a driver hack.
Re:RivaTuner (Score:2)
I would also think that the Quadro devices are designed much more robustly. ATA drive is to SCSI drive as Ti card is to Quadro.
I could be completely wrong on both points. If I am, please correct me.
Nope (Score:2)
It's the same deal as with the ATI 9500-to-9700 hack, except that the success rate is 100%. (ATI 9500s and 9700s are the same chip, just lower clockrates
PCI version, woohoo! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:PCI version, woohoo! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:PCI version, woohoo! (Score:2)
Meh... looking at that Dawn, I'm thinking that my GeForce3 64MB video card just isn't good enough...
Re:PCI version, woohoo! (Score:3, Interesting)
When I upgraded from a GeForce2 MX to a GeForce4 MX I tried to grab some benchmarks:
test geforce2 geforce4
--------
xengine 237-238 rpm 60xxxx rpm
gears -fps 39-45 fps 45 solid
gears -fps -delay 1 83 fps 90 solid
gears -fps -delay 0 120-160 fps 300-500
so yeah, it makes a difference. Return to Castle Wolfenstein seemed a bit snappier with the GeForce4 than the 2, but I didn't
Re:PCI version, woohoo! (Score:2)
Re:PCI version, woohoo! (Score:2)
Re:PCI version, woohoo! (Score:2)
Dawn Nude patch (Score:5, Funny)
http://www.digital-daily.com/news/?view_options
HA HA HA. I need a new card...
Re:Dawn Nude patch (Score:1)
Err... (Score:5, Insightful)
Or is the FX the new MX line?
Re:Err... (Score:5, Informative)
No, they've dropped the mx moniker and are doing everything by model number like ATI has been. The High end GeForce FX is the FX 5800. There are 5800s, 5600s, and 5200s. 268. Pricewise too.
Re:Err... (Score:2)
This card is the extreme buget end of the market...the 4200 was the midrange.
Model numbers mean nothing and age means nothing.
There are only three things that matter
- features, performance and price.
People looking for a video card will put one of those as their priority
Those looking for performance won't be looking at this card. but that's ok, because those looking for price and features will.
If you're looki
Water Cooled (Score:2, Informative)
Nvidia's idiotic naming conventions (Score:5, Interesting)
First we had the original GeForce 1+2 series, and things were good. Then GeForce 3 Ti kicked it up a notch performance wise. Following this the GeForce 4 *Ti* series continued the improvement in performance, but the GeForce 4 *MX* series was also introduced and performed like a piece of overcooked dog-doo. In benchmarking my old GeForce 2 GTS card easily beats a GF2-MX 400 in 3D games and benchmarks.
But nvidia's marketing fools weren't done yet. Not content with ripping off kids who thought they would be getting a cool, up to date graphics card for a bargain price, they then introduced the following naming convention to the GeForce 4 Ti series:
GF4-Ti 4200 - Entry level
GF4-Ti 4400 - Mainstream
GF4-Ti 4600 - High performance
GF4-Ti 4800 - Either a 4200 or 4600 with an 8x AGP bus (read: no performance increase), depending on which version you happen to buy
So, we have a GeForce 2 that kicks the ass of a GeForce 4 in 3D games, and now a GeForce 4 4400 that kicks the ass of some GeForce 4 4800s but will always be slower than a GeForce 4 4600, which in turn will always be at least as fast as a 4800.
With the FX series, who the hell knows? All I know is that there is now absolutely no connection between the family number (Geforce 1,2,3,4,FX) and actual performance, and no connection between the model number (4200, 4400, 4600, 4800) and actual performance. Given that ATI is currently whupping nvidia in performance and output quality it seems to me that the marketing people at nvidia need to think *really* hard about their naming conventions. Amazingly adding a higher number to a piece of crap does not make it a faster piece of crap, although it may wreck your reputation with consumers.
Re:Nvidia's idiotic naming conventions (Score:5, Funny)
He should have stuck a jesus fish on the VW... (Score:1)
Re:Nvidia's idiotic naming conventions (Score:4, Funny)
Yeah, yeah, we know what you meant, but NO! I know two GeForce 256 owners that are confused by this. They're answer to this: "whatever, I'll just buy whatever you tell me to when Doom comes out".
Re:Nvidia's idiotic naming conventions (Score:1)
Re:Nvidia's idiotic naming conventions (Score:2)
And unlike a benchmark, the price also reflects other factors like visual quality, fan noise, expected resale value, etc.
Re:Nvidia's idiotic naming conventions (Score:2)
What about ATi's? The 9000Pro is slower than the 8500 (nor it is DX9 compliant as its name could imply). The 9600 is slower than the 9500. New isn't necessarely better, at least for GPUs. All those benchmarks are certainly getting on the marketing droids' nerves!
When you think that most of the 9500 non-pro board are for all intent and purposes 9700pros, sold for half the price of the later:
-the 4 disabled pipelines can be reenabled
-9
Re:Nvidia's idiotic naming conventions (Score:2, Funny)
Ohhhh as far as I'm concerned, you just can't cook dog-doo enough.
I was worried for a second.. (Score:5, Funny)
*breathe of relief* What would I have done if my video card and motherboard didn't match?!
Re:I was worried for a second.. (Score:2)
This is really funny - until you realize that people are actually caring about that stuff. If you would have told me 2 years ago that it matters what color lighted fan you put in your case, I would have laughed at you. Hmm, come to think of it, I would laugh at you today.
I know someone who was
Re:Put them in a Beige Box? (Score:2)
Re:Put them in a Beige Box? (Score:2)
>>>>>>>>
I second that. Boxes with now Windows on them are just great. More people should try it
NVidia's budget cards.... (Score:4, Informative)
The thing overclocks nicely, and when running in "best performance" mode in 16bit, it flies, uh well kinda. The key with all NVidia budget cards is to run 'em without all the technical advanced features. The reviewer enabled all kinds of crap that the card only just supported. Perhaps NVidia would do well to not let their budget cards support these advanced features. Benchies would be higher, and I guess more realistic. Most gamers (or would-be gamers with crappy MX200's like me) try to squeeze as much juice from their cards as they can.
Just got an ATI card (Score:2, Insightful)
The FX 5200 was being compared to an old budget card. The 9000 pro has been replaced(for a while now) by the 9100 and 9200 cards which are faster! Not to mention that you can get a 128 meg version for 74$ just 5$ more than that card(at gameve.com).
I probably would get the FX 5200 because (Score:2)
I absolutely refuse to give up dead necessary peripheral cards to add in a video card when they can just as easily make one that doesn't take up that extra PCI slot.
I'll wait.
(And no, moderators, jeez, this ain't a troll or flamebait, it's an honest opinion..)
Submitter summary (Score:2, Insightful)
The submitter said: the GeForce FX 5200 looks more like an exercise in marketing spin than a real revolution for budget graphics cards.
Tech-report said: The GeForce FX 5200 isn't as capable a performer as its feature list might suggest, but that doesn't mean cards based on the chip aren't worth picking up... The GeForce FX 5200 is a great feature-rich card for anyone that's not looking for the best budget gaming option.
Sheesh, why not let the article speak for itself and spare us the lame and inaccurate
Take the red pill... (Score:4, Insightful)
In terms of DX9, the only smart thing would be to get a 9500/9600 Pro if you're looking for something in the middle end, and a 9700/9800 Pro if you're looking high-end.
I'm on a 9700 Pro right now myself, and there's no way that I'd consider any nVidia product at this moment in time. Maybe sometime in the future (and no, I am not an nVidiot or a fanATIc).
Re:Take the red pill... (Score:2)
*$50 was the
Not necessarily. (Score:2)
Re:Not necessarily. (ATI Drivers) (Score:2)
ATI may have the hardware, but, I agree, their drivers are *BUGGY*.
Sounds like... (Score:2, Interesting)
Cute, but not impressive (Score:2)
I took it back, not enough improvement to warrent suffering through another round of software updates until all the kinks are worked out.
Re:two words (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:two words (Score:4, Informative)
The MX's had fewer features; this one is full-featured, just slower.
Re:two words (Score:2)
Re:two words (Score:2)
They are fine if you do 16bit color because the bandwith and not the chip is the bottleneck.
I am using a MX right now because the fan on my geforce4 failed. Miraculously it survived. I was replacing my motherboard due to a powersurge and noticed the card was scolding hot.
Quake3 and UT are fine in 16bit color. Doom3 would suck on it though.
Re:two words (Score:1)
Re:Can Dawn run on the Gf4 4200? (Score:5, Insightful)
Dawn uses pixel shaders, which (as the name implies) are programs that execute for EVERY pixel being rendered, There is NO way to emulate that in software and still get decent frame rates, no matter how good your CPU is.
Re:Can Dawn run on the Gf4 4200? (Score:2)
Re:Can Dawn run on the Gf4 4200? (Score:2)
Re:Can Dawn run on the Gf4 4200? (Score:2)