RussianSensation
Elite Member
- Sep 5, 2003
- 19,458
- 765
- 126
If you don't, the current crop of Integrated graphics are just fine.
If you do, you're not doing yourself any favors with a <$100 card.
For casual gamers on a budget, IVB is going to bring a decent increase in performance over SB.
Performance is pretty good considering it's "free".
Source
I'd even argue that IVB will already make HD7750 somewhat questionable at $100 unless a person needs specific features of GCN for HTPC, etc. For people who don't play at higher resolutions with DX11 settings on or who don't play the most modern games, I don't think something like an HD7750 is even worth $100. IVB will also support 3 displays and even faster video encoding. Also, I would expect as the industry further embraces the APU path, we might fairly large performance increases from one APU generation to the next, especially compared to what appear to be marginal upgrades in the $100-125 GPU space. It took AMD almost 2.5 years to introduce the HD7770 @ $159 that's barely 20-25% faster than an $80 HD5770; but Haswell's APU will probably double the performance of IVB's APU in Q2 of 2013. The future is much brighter for APU performance increases, while performance at $100-125 level is pretty stagnant at the moment for discrete GPUs.
AMD's Kaveri looks to be as fast as an HD7750 by next year. Unless these estimates are way off or we see much more powerful entry level GPUs, I'd imagine < $100 GPUs are more or less irrelevant. NV and AMD would need to seriously increase the performance offered at $50-100 levels to make any reasonable sense. I think they'd need HD6850 level of performance at minimum for $80 and HD6870 at $100 by next year to sway casual gamers to upgrade from the APU.
Last edited:
