- Apr 4, 2013
- 501
- 1
- 76
Hey guys,
Been a while since I made any significant upgrade to my system (in signature) and a friend of mine was telling me that 1440p/144hz is a huge difference - like night and day, he says. I've figured when I upgrade next it would make sense to go with a 1440p/144hz one. I'm still on 1080p @ 60hz currently. But I know my 970 wouldn't be enough for most graphics intense games at 1440p, especially not to utilize the 144hz.
So I'm wondering what GPU is considered like entry level for that these days? I've read some saying it's probably the 1080. I'm not sure if my i5-4690k would then become a bottleneck though.
Also as I haven't kept that up to date with the computer components market I'm wondering if now is generally considered a good/bad time to upgrade? I've heard some saying it's bad as AMD is set to release Threadripper maybe around the end of this year and their new GPU line of Vega stuff which could give Intel/Nvidia a good run and would at least likely lower prices. The 1080 still seems pretty expensive to me.
The monitor I've been looking at is the Dell S2417DG, which is a G-Sync monitor which I also hear good things about but of course that kind of ties you into getting an Nvidia card if you want to utilize the G-Sync, so if AMD is possibly coming out with better cards I thought maybe best to wait and see how those are before committing to a G-Sync?
Any input/advice appreciated, thanks.
Been a while since I made any significant upgrade to my system (in signature) and a friend of mine was telling me that 1440p/144hz is a huge difference - like night and day, he says. I've figured when I upgrade next it would make sense to go with a 1440p/144hz one. I'm still on 1080p @ 60hz currently. But I know my 970 wouldn't be enough for most graphics intense games at 1440p, especially not to utilize the 144hz.
So I'm wondering what GPU is considered like entry level for that these days? I've read some saying it's probably the 1080. I'm not sure if my i5-4690k would then become a bottleneck though.
Also as I haven't kept that up to date with the computer components market I'm wondering if now is generally considered a good/bad time to upgrade? I've heard some saying it's bad as AMD is set to release Threadripper maybe around the end of this year and their new GPU line of Vega stuff which could give Intel/Nvidia a good run and would at least likely lower prices. The 1080 still seems pretty expensive to me.
The monitor I've been looking at is the Dell S2417DG, which is a G-Sync monitor which I also hear good things about but of course that kind of ties you into getting an Nvidia card if you want to utilize the G-Sync, so if AMD is possibly coming out with better cards I thought maybe best to wait and see how those are before committing to a G-Sync?
Any input/advice appreciated, thanks.