gtx 460 upgrade

oliharan92

Member
Sep 9, 2010
62
0
61
Hi all, its been a while since using the forum but im looking at getting back to pc gaming. I have been using my xbox1 for the last couple of years.

Current spec is:
Cpu - i7 950
Gpu - gtx 460 1gb
8gb ram
240gb ssd

I currently only use a 1080p monitor but hopefully this will change in the future.
Looking at playing the latest titles aswell as some oldies. Mainly fps/driving.

What cards would you recommend? How much would i need to spend to get my rig playing games at high/very high again?

Thanks for the help
 

crisium

Platinum Member
Aug 19, 2001
2,643
615
136
What power supply do you have?

The Radeon 390 and GTX 970 are the best performance per buck cards and reasonably satisfy "high/very high" at 1080p. I wouldn't recommend going to a lower tier than this, as the next closest in pricing the Radeon 380X is actually quite a bit slower. The 390 will likely age a bit better than the 970, but it also used more wattage to run.

There are newer cards coming out later this year that will offer much more performance-per-watt, if you are open to waiting.
 

Leyawiin

Diamond Member
Nov 11, 2008
3,204
52
91
GTX 970. Nvidia's lower driver overhead would play nicer with your six year old CPU. You'll probably have some bottlenecking of the GPU regardless but as crisium said I wouldn't go lower.
 

Ketchup

Elite Member
Sep 1, 2002
14,559
248
106
Might as well wait a month or two and see if the cards that AMD and Nvidia are about to release are any good.
 

wilds

Platinum Member
Oct 26, 2012
2,059
674
136
You waited this long, might as well wait a couple more months!
 

Denithor

Diamond Member
Apr 11, 2004
6,298
23
81
What specific motherboard do you have? You could consider upgrading your i7 to an x5650 (6-core Westmere Xeon chip, available on eBay for around $70).

http://forums.anandtech.com/showthread.php?t=2335636

Concerning the GPU, for 1080p today I'd lean toward 390/390X but as others have said, next generation of cards due out from both manufacturers within the next 2-3 months. New generation going to be a node change, first in three generations, so very likely the mid-range cards will be close to matching today's top end.
 

Headfoot

Diamond Member
Feb 28, 2008
4,444
641
126
Don't buy something now. New cards come out in just a few months and will obsolete the cards you are looking at now. I'd just hold on until June, read the reviews then and decide.
 
Mar 10, 2006
11,715
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GTX 970 for good "bang for the buck," GTX 980 Ti for the best single GPU performance you can get today. If you are looking to go beyond 1080p at high/very high, recommend shelling out for the 980 Ti.

Might also be worthwhile to upgrade to more RAM (12GB or 24GB).

What power supply do you have?
 

b-mac

Member
Jun 15, 2015
149
23
81
GTX 970 for good "bang for the buck," GTX 980 Ti for the best single GPU performance you can get today. If you are looking to go beyond 1080p at high/very high, recommend shelling out for the 980 Ti.

Might also be worthwhile to upgrade to more RAM (12GB or 24GB).

What power supply do you have?

What would 24GB of RAM do for them if its for gaming?
 

Termie

Diamond Member
Aug 17, 2005
7,949
48
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www.techbuyersguru.com
Note: 8GB of RAM isn't fine on a socket 1366 system. Perhaps he was mistaken, but this would mean he's running just two of his three channels. He should be at 6GB or 12GB.