Well at worst this card ties with 390/970 so it would then be considered there best card. At best it's 980/Nano level. So even better at that point. It's just a little strange they are making a block. It'll probably cost $100. On top of the GPU, kinda takes away the point of the card
Well at worst this card ties with 390/970 so it would then be considered there best card. At best it's 980/Nano level. So even better at that point. It's just a little strange they are making a block. It'll probably cost $100. On top of the GPU, kinda takes away the point of the card
It'll more than likely already beat a 390 at stock. So doesn't really matter much tbh. And it'll overclock just as great if not better. FinFET has shown that it's easily capable with Pascal. Now it being effective is a different matter and something Pascal doesn't quite do. Just hope it's not that way for the Polaris series.
Another way to look at it is not a performance comparison, but maybe EK is looking to get a whole new range of enthusiasts into custom / semi-custom water cooling.
I don't know many people who purchase top tier cards that almost always receive the water block treatment from multiple vendors.
I do know a lot of people who buy the mid range cards however.
Combine a no-frills waterblock to minimize cost with many of these new entry-level starter kits for water cooling and I think the industry can pick up some new buyers for sure.