BenSkywalker
Diamond Member
Mobo roundups used to be Anand's forte, on that singular topic AT was hands down the best site on the web, now they aren't a player at all. It really is sad, trying to find anything comparable to the old round ups is nigh impossible, certainly nothing with the quality of the older reviews Anand himself used to do.
They really, really aren't. Take a look at the 4670 review- they compare it to the 3850, 3870, 9600GSO but leave out the defacto card in that price bracket- the 9600GT. Open up the 4870 1GB review and while the certainly cover the boards that most sites like to compare, they leave out setups like the 9800GT in SLI which is very much a direct competitor in the price bracket. It isn't what they have in, it is what they leave out more often then not.
If you read AT only, you may believe that. 9600GTs the clocks range from 650MHZ to 735MHZ, 9800GT 600-700MHZ, 4850 625-700MHZ, 260s 576-684MHZ, 4870s 750-800MHZ(not a huge rift there, but how close current parts are it certainly needs to be considered), 280 602-700MHZ.
There are absolutely huge rifts in the individual cards, sometimes enough to totally flip the charts around(a 260@684MHZ will often times beat a 280@602MHZ etc). You wouldn't ever know this reading AT, but in all honesty some of the boards it is more difficult to find one configured as AT tests it(straight reference design) then it is to find one of the OC versions of the boards. I think AT has done an exceptionally poor job at offering reviews that are good at offering potential buyers the information they would want to look for. At best, they are a snapshot of how reference designs line up in limited situations against hand picked opposition which honestly I can't figure out how they determine(some of the aforementioned exclusions are just part of the typical trend).
AT is still doing a good job of comparing GPUs against each other, including SLI, except for mobile parts.
They really, really aren't. Take a look at the 4670 review- they compare it to the 3850, 3870, 9600GSO but leave out the defacto card in that price bracket- the 9600GT. Open up the 4870 1GB review and while the certainly cover the boards that most sites like to compare, they leave out setups like the 9800GT in SLI which is very much a direct competitor in the price bracket. It isn't what they have in, it is what they leave out more often then not.
For video cards, most are reference design these days so a multi-card [ same-GPU ] roundup would be a waste of time, unless it was to rate the box & heatsink art.
If you read AT only, you may believe that. 9600GTs the clocks range from 650MHZ to 735MHZ, 9800GT 600-700MHZ, 4850 625-700MHZ, 260s 576-684MHZ, 4870s 750-800MHZ(not a huge rift there, but how close current parts are it certainly needs to be considered), 280 602-700MHZ.
There are absolutely huge rifts in the individual cards, sometimes enough to totally flip the charts around(a 260@684MHZ will often times beat a 280@602MHZ etc). You wouldn't ever know this reading AT, but in all honesty some of the boards it is more difficult to find one configured as AT tests it(straight reference design) then it is to find one of the OC versions of the boards. I think AT has done an exceptionally poor job at offering reviews that are good at offering potential buyers the information they would want to look for. At best, they are a snapshot of how reference designs line up in limited situations against hand picked opposition which honestly I can't figure out how they determine(some of the aforementioned exclusions are just part of the typical trend).