Ahhhh Which Graphics Card Do I Get

TonyTBR

New member
Hey

I have been going over this in my head for a while know and i am still no closer to an answer, I need a graphics card that can play all the latest games on high settings with relatively high FPS, I want an Nvidia card and I don't know weather to go with: EVGA GTX 590 Classified 3gb, MSi GTX 580 Lightning Xtream 3gb, or any other 580's or 590's.

I need help!!!

Thanks
 
Have you got a maximum price that you can spend?

Yes any thing under £600
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Have you checked other sites for reviews and benchmarks yet??

I'd choose 590 as on this site people say go for the single most expensive card you can afford.
 
Well the 590 is technically a dual GPU, but on one card, its still good though.

If all you want to do is play every game maxed, you only need a good 580. Is this for 1080p gaming? I know bragging rights may mean a lot or whatever, but for your needs a GTX580 is good, the Lightning or the Lighning XE are both very good. Or you can go for the lowly Twin Frozr II (btw these are all MSI cards)
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what are the rest of ur systems specs???? would hate to see a 590 on a 939 or 775 setup lmao
 
What about two MSI GTX570 Power Editions with Twin Frozer III Cooler. You can get them off Scan for 263 pounds each. LINK

The Power Edition is basically the Lightning for the GTX570. Get two of these and you'll be laughing.

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I'd never suggest 2x cards only cos, and depending on, whether the 'asker' is prepared to not necessarily expecting 2x the performance over the single card, be a bit disappointed occassionally when certain games don't like dual cards, sometimes have to mess about with drivers, double the heat for your system.

All that being considered, there are a number of benefits to be had, especially when the game(s) you like playing favor the dual card setup you're using. Doesn't happen enough for my liking - and/or cards should be used parallel as opposed to the sli/xfire botch they are at the moment, like cuda parallel use that requires no bridge of any kind. (personal gripe)

Anywho, no, I'm a big fan of the best single gpu card you can afford. Less messing about, more gaming.

Take into account also what games you like and what monitor you're using. If you like Minesweeper on a 19" monitor, the answer will be different than Mafia II on a 24"+ monitor, or 2/3 screens or 3D or whatever. (this you should really let the guys know before asking)

PhysX, "I want to fold for the team" and "I like that I can convert videos 10x faster than the fastest i7 cpu", are other things you should say you're either interested in or not.

Best cooled GTX580 if you're a PhysX/Quality textures as standard/Folding/Converting fan/3D.

Best cooled HD6970 if you like raw fps with easy multiple screens (*Eyefinity model).

.. debateable, but it's IMO.
 
Resolution up to 19xx=16xx 570/580.

Anything over, dual or triple monitors 590. The 590 is designed to do just that (inc surround vision or whatever Nvidia call it) and using it for anything less is a waste of time and money.

At 1080p the 570 is the sweet spot. The 580 is obviously faster but you need to take into account the importance of Vsync, which will cap you at 60 fps any way. The 580 isn't fast enough for the resolutions above 1080p so is a bit of a white elephant given that it can't really do much more than a 570 at 1080p.

I know you have a budget of £600 but that doesn't mean you should burn it up just 'because'.

Weigh up what you need, and then what you want. If you want to dump £600 then do so, but just know that other than your benchmark bragging scores you will probably have wasted a ton load of money that could have been invested elsewhere.

Also (forgive me for post skipping as I'm pretty busy today) Crossfire, IMO is absolutely terrible. Been there, seen it, done it. It is, apparently, why the 6990 is quite far off of the 590. They should be about evenly matched but once again Nvidia's drivers are better as they have always been.

SLI has its caveats also. For example my pal is running a 460 2win and in Left 4 dead 2 the sky is often purple and he suffers the odd CTD.

A single GPU is always the better option if you like, want to sit down and enjoy your PC. If you want to spend your days beating out benchmarks then by all means go ahead
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I'd never suggest 2x cards only cos, and depending on, whether the 'asker' is prepared to not necessarily expecting 2x the performance over the single card, be a bit disappointed occassionally when certain games don't like dual cards, sometimes have to mess about with drivers, double the heat for your system.

^ Wot he said.
 
If you wanted two GPUs to have near 200% of the power of one, you could always go with a Voodoo2 SLI setup
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The processor is the i7 2600K and the mobo is the ASUS Maximus IV Extream

what resolution? and if its not for a surround setup, go for the GTX 580 Matrix
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(i'm saying that cuz what that board you got, well they match SOO nice, trust i just got the M.IV.E-z with the matrix
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what resolution? and if its not for a surround setup, go for the GTX 580 Matrix
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(i'm saying that cuz what that board you got, well they match SOO nice, trust i just got the M.IV.E-z with the matrix
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)

That sounds pritty much what my setup wants to be apart from i am undicided weather to get the i7 or i5? is the i5 enough for gaming? i think i will go with the 580 matrix now because it will look awsome on the maximus 4 extream. also i have the same case and ssd but i went with the Corsair AX850.
 
That sounds pritty much what my setup wants to be apart from i am undicided weather to get the i7 or i5? is the i5 enough for gaming? i think i will go with the 580 matrix now because it will look awsome on the maximus 4 extream. also i have the same case and ssd but i went with the Corsair AX850.

Good choice on the PSU
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And yes, the i5-2500K is more than enough for gaming hehe. LINK
 
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