980 ti still have enough muscle for at least 1 more year. even after nv stop including it in their game ready drivers. for 300$ it is worth it. especially when you compare it to the same price 1060. it is like 30-50% faster for the same money.The Ti for $300 seems like a better deal pound for pound than the 1070 for $450. Then again, Nvidia seems apt to abandon previous tier products to devote all of their efforts for only their current line, which could be a potential down side. If I was not limited by my i5 2500 I may have tried to spring in the extra fifty bucks and pass on the 1060 I settled on.
Debian's on price range, but used 7970/280x cards for $100 or less are hard to beat for the budget gamer. 3GB, latest DX12 games support, and still improving performance.
So, would it even be worth upgrading from some 7950 3GB cards, if that's what I already have?
Was looking at GTX1060 (MSI Gaming X 6GB) for $290, and RX 460 (Gigabyte WindForce 4GB OC) for $135.
Debian's on price range, but used 7970/280x cards for $100 or less are hard to beat for the budget gamer. 3GB, latest DX12 games support, and still improving performance.
390's / 290's are still profitable for mining. That's probably why you haven't seen a huge dump of them.
I want to say used Maxwell; but the lack of async compute is going to kill those cards in newer games. I can't even say Hawaii based cards because they're still pricey. At this point, the newer mid range 14nm cards are better options.