You haven't answered my question SirPauly

This goes back to the topic of the GTX660Ti:
For overclockers:
Is Videocard A that delivers 20% more performance OC vs. the competitor's OC card at a similar price a better value (7950 OC vs. 660Ti OC)?
For non-overclockers:
Is Videocard A that delivers 90% of the performance for 25-30% lower price vs. the competitor's card a better value (HD7870 vs. 660Ti stock)?
For someone who wants MSAA, PhysX, why not spend a little more for the GTX670?
Are GTX660Ti price cuts reasonable?
Looks to me like GTX660Ti is overpriced. AIB's think it needs price cuts. Can't see how this is hurting the consumer. This is great for us!
7970ge performance is not the same as a 7950 you can over clock a 7950 up close to a 7970 though
Of course an overclocked 7970 GE will be a 7950 OC. My point was that HD7950 OC can surpass stock GTX680/HD7970 GE in performance on average. GTX660Ti cannot. If you look at the benchmarks, HD7950 OC = GTX670 OC, but costs $70-80 less. Why would any overclocker running an enthusiast PC gaming rig with Core i5/i7 buy the 660Ti over the after-market 7950 card?
Similarly stated, someone who doesn't overclock and wants better price/performance and better performance/watt would get the HD7870.
Someone who wants MSAA, PhysX would pay a little more for GTX670. A $300 price-level is too high for a card to tank with Mods and MSAA - that's exactly what 660Ti does. Also, if games get demanding, there is no reserve room to increase performance by much since a large number of 660Ti's GPU boost to 1150-1250mhz out of the box.
See reviews.
Also, the AIBs have made a valid point that after-market 660Tis can often be priced very close to a GTX670.
For example. Keep in mind that outside of North America, in many countries of the world, NV cards cost more. That makes them even worse value against 7870/7950. It's pretty hard to portray this when people deny that AMD offered better price/performance since 2009 at most price levels unless you waited to buy your card on some special sale. On average, AMD competed on price/performance since the take-over and the failed 2900XT/3870 series. This is a well-known fact, not a hypothesis. This is why the new management dropped this strategy and raised prices. People can't be crying that AMD raised prices and at the same time deny that they offered the best price/performance. That's a contradictory position.
If anybody has the patience to read the aforementioned walls and walls of text one red line crosses all, Nvidia has no card worth buying this time around (maybe the 670 but hmmm, no). Wait, they had no card worth buying over AMD since 2009.
I never said no NV card was worth buying. I said if the same criteria being presented here is used now: performance/watt, then sure, no NV card was worth buying since AMD had superior performance/watt. Say that isn't so?
When HD4870 launched for $299, GTX260 was $399. Pretty interesting though how people ignored AMD's undeniable price/performance advantage and now the same people are claiming AMD is ripping us off for raising prices (but NV isn't since they supposedly delayed the real flagship GK110 because AMD under-delivered). If NV could have launched GK110 by now, why didn't they? NV had no problems selling
8800GTX Ultra for $830. Looks to me that selling GK110 even at $830 was not profitable this year (unless NV intends to launch it sometime in the next 4 months), or maybe it was physically impossible to launch until Q4 2012 (Dec 2012 is the expected launch date for K20).
Pretty interesting to hear that GTX480/580 at $499 were not overpriced. Let's take a look:
GTX480 draws 270W of power at load vs. 143W for the 5870. That's a 126W power penalty. GTX480 ($499) and cost
35% more than HD5870 ($369) despite being only about 15% faster.
http://tpucdn.com/reviews/Palit/GeForce_GTX_660_Ti_Jet_Stream/images/power_peak.gif
Using performance/$ or performance/watt metric, GTX480 was terrible and yet certain people were fine with the 126W power penalty. I supposed this was justified by Compute, higher performance, PhysX....OK moving on, but the general trend was that power consumption was ignored. Now suddenly power consumption is the centre of attention and compute is irrelevant. Amazing.
Further, after-market HD7950s @ 1025mhz draw 167-175W of power and gives a gamer ~GTX680 level of performance for $180 less. This is ignored. GTX460 OCing while drawing 236W of power was perfectly fine against the HD5870. Amazing.
Even when HD7950 @ 1150mhz is 15-20% faster than a GTX660Ti OC for $10 more, the power consumption difference between these 2 cards is going to be less than 80W at load. So technically that means HD7950 looks a lot better than the 660Ti compared to how GTX480 did vs. the 5870. You still get a massive compute advantage, the same 15-20% performance advantage, more VRAM (same as 480 vs. 5870) minus the 35% price premium. Yet, the 7950 is not recommended over the 660Ti. Amazing.
HD6950 @ $250-300 unlocked into a 6970. GTX580 was about 20% faster than the 6970, give or take, but cost 67-100% more than an unlocked HD6950. Damn right, GTX580 was overpriced from a performance/$ perspective (especially since it couldn't even convincingly outperform the 6970 at 1600P).
If people stayed consistent in their message, so many threads wouldn't have to drag on for 10+ pages. I bought 470s because I don't care about power consumption and I care about overclocking. The same people who are now talking about power consumption as being critical still bought Fermi cards last 2 generations. This does not compute since AMD had the best performance/watt for 3 generations in a row. If power consumption is suddenly so important, these gamers would not have bought a single NV card since 2009. This is where the inconsistency comes from. The same for overclocking: why did it count for GTX460/560Ti/470s but not for 7950/7970s? Does not compute since when you overclocked 460/560Ti/470 cards, power consumption increased through the roof!
If someone prefers NV, they should just admit it and not beat around the bush. Twisting historical facts is not getting us anywhere. Otherwise, every thread is going to be derailed to show only aspects videocards that show NV winning. I've not even seen anyone here admit that FX5000 was an utter failure. Even when NV gets blown away, it's still not admitted. This generation NV lost the performance crown, not admitted despite HD7970 GE after-market costing less. Looks like GTX680 needs a price cut to have similar price/performance.
More amusing is when AMD launched ahead of NV and lowered prices, they are called "desperate." When there are rumored price cuts on NV cards because they are not selling well, a defence is mounted why NV's pricing as justified. Double standard?
And apparently high NV prices are AMD's fault only. They have nothing to do with NV trying to maintain their profit margins because of rising 28nm wafer prices. It can't be possible that it costs AMD less to manufacture a 212mm^2 Pitcairn chip than it costs NV to manufacture a 294mm^2 GTX660Ti chip?
The story continues:
Bitcoin mining on AMD cards - ignored, despite 100% proven to work @ a low rate of electricty costs.
Quiet after-market overclockable 7950/7970 cards - ignored. Reference cards that can't be purchased are linked to skew power consumption and noise level numbers.
Massive compute advantage and double precision performance for distributing computing projects - ignored.
Any performance advantage in games where AMD wins - ignored because AMD Gaming Evolved titles don't count, but TWIMTPB titles count because TWIMTPB titles are "more popular".
I don't think anyone of us had a problem when GTX480/580 were faster with Tessellation. As gamers we want to see situations where our cards are performing well and not performing well. That actually helps us.
Consistency is key.