- Mar 14, 2011
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It depends on the resolutions people go with.
I see 1080p continuing to be "standard" for quite some time. I for one, am more looking forward to upgrading to a 120hz panel than I am a panel with a resolution greater than 1080p.
If you're asking because you're buying today, don't waste money.
Whatever game will be out in two years will require GPU power available in two years. It's the nature of this business. A 6GB card from today which will choke on the latest games in two years anyways.
OP, are you looking at crossfire/sli? then I am pretty sure the question should be "is 3GB enough ram" as the memory in both cards are similar/duplicated to allow for the rendering of similar parts of the same screen image.
OP, are you looking at crossfire/sli? then I am pretty sure the question should be "is 3GB enough ram" as the memory in both cards are similar/duplicated to allow for the rendering of similar parts of the same screen image.
Or will no games be able to take advantage of it even 2 years from now?
The extra vram just isn't worth anything, at all. Everytime a new set of cards come out this custom ones with 2x VRam arrive and every time the tests show it makes no performance difference at all. Then someone does a test going back with older cards and more vram and shows that the card doesn't run any better because its limited in other ways.
Round and round we go.
It only affects things when process would need more memory to do things than is available.The extra vram just isn't worth anything, at all. Everytime a new set of cards come out this custom ones with 2x VRam arrive and every time the tests show it makes no performance difference at all. Then someone does a test going back with older cards and more vram and shows that the card doesn't run any better because its limited in other ways.
Round and round we go.
even without AA, 1gb is not always enough now for a high end card at 1080.Depends on the resolution. I mean, you might even need 6GB VRAM *today* if you are gaming on three 30" 2560x1600 screens, playing a game with ultra-high rez texture mods, for instance.
For 1080p I think even 1GB VRAM is enough for the next ~12 months if you don't care about anti-aliasing. If you do want AA then you will want more like 1.5+ GB VRAM. For ~24 month timeframes, definitely at least 1.5 GB VRAM.
even without AA, 1gb is not always enough now for a high end card at 1080.
Quite convenient that the new GTX 660 Ti is suppose to come in next month with 1.5GB GDDR5 VRAM.
Depends on the resolution. I mean, you might even need 6GB VRAM *today* if you are gaming on three 30" 2560x1600 screens, playing a game with ultra-high rez texture mods, for instance.
