deerhunter716
Member
True but I honestly have never seen a real difference at all using AA and AF to be honest on my 27" monitor.
Originally posted by: Mana
Are there any reviews out there that compare the stock GT at 600 MHz to the ones that are overclocked, as well as the GTX, etc.? I'm just wondering what kind of performance increases are seen between the 600 MHz version and the 700 MHz version of the 8800 GT.
Originally posted by: deerhunter716
True but I honestly have never seen a real difference at all using AA and AF to be honest on my 27" monitor.
Originally posted by: SickBeast
I thought the MSRP of the 8800GTs was $200...
Originally posted by: betasub
Originally posted by: SickBeast
I thought the MSRP of the 8800GTs was $200...
Yah, for an absolutely bare card, stock cooler, and 256MB vRAM, maybe...
lucky bastard... 😉 I'm trying to convince myself to upgrade now instead of waiting for the high end to come out.Originally posted by: Capt Caveman
Well, my X1900XTX just died. Looks like a SSC is in my near future. 🙂
yes, and I would be interested in a QX6850 for $100-$150, too, but that doesn't mean that it will ever get that cheap.Originally posted by: nullpointerus
Originally posted by: yacoub
And we haven't even seen an announcement for the 256MB models, although I don't know why gamers would care much for them seeing as how 512MB is pretty much required for any remotely modern FPS game's High settings.
Actually, many gamers -- maybe you meant gaming enthusiasts? -- buy low/mid-range cards. (Hey, there are people on gaming forums who regularly advise CF'ing X1650's!) These people have lower standards: they may not care about running the native res. of their LCDs or using AA/AF.
Even so, the 8800GT 256MB model would be very attractive if it dropped down into the $100-150 range.
Now that the 8800GT is here, what we need is stock and a price war. Although I purchased an 8800GT (not here yet!), I hope that the next AMD card is a decent competitor. There is always room for another upgrade...
Obviously, but at what point did I claim it as a certainty?Originally posted by: bryanW1995
yes, and I would be interested in a QX6850 for $100-$150, too, but that doesn't mean that it will ever get that cheap.Originally posted by: nullpointerus
Originally posted by: yacoub
And we haven't even seen an announcement for the 256MB models, although I don't know why gamers would care much for them seeing as how 512MB is pretty much required for any remotely modern FPS game's High settings.
Actually, many gamers -- maybe you meant gaming enthusiasts? -- buy low/mid-range cards. (Hey, there are people on gaming forums who regularly advise CF'ing X1650's!) These people have lower standards: they may not care about running the native res. of their LCDs or using AA/AF.
Even so, the 8800GT 256MB model would be very attractive if it dropped down into the $100-150 range.
Now that the 8800GT is here, what we need is stock and a price war. Although I purchased an 8800GT (not here yet!), I hope that the next AMD card is a decent competitor. There is always room for another upgrade...
Originally posted by: aka1nas
The $200 models will the be 6-layer price reduced board. the only manufacturers making those will be the Chinese no-namers. Expect brand-name stock models to come in somewhere around $225-$250 with overclocked models being a bit more.
Originally posted by: nullpointerus
Obviously, but at what point did I claim it as a certainty?Originally posted by: bryanW1995
yes, and I would be interested in a QX6850 for $100-$150, too, but that doesn't mean that it will ever get that cheap.Originally posted by: nullpointerus
Originally posted by: yacoub
And we haven't even seen an announcement for the 256MB models, although I don't know why gamers would care much for them seeing as how 512MB is pretty much required for any remotely modern FPS game's High settings.
Actually, many gamers -- maybe you meant gaming enthusiasts? -- buy low/mid-range cards. (Hey, there are people on gaming forums who regularly advise CF'ing X1650's!) These people have lower standards: they may not care about running the native res. of their LCDs or using AA/AF.
Even so, the 8800GT 256MB model would be very attractive if it dropped down into the $100-150 range.
Now that the 8800GT is here, what we need is stock and a price war. Although I purchased an 8800GT (not here yet!), I hope that the next AMD card is a decent competitor. There is always room for another upgrade...
yacoub said he could not imagine why gamers would care for the 8800GT, and I merely provided a possible scenario...not sure why you need to be sarcastic toward me.