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Sep 10 2007, 12:48 AM
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#1
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Newbie [ Level 2 ] Group: Members Posts: 12 Joined: 9-September 07 From: U.S. Member No.: 24,727 |
Im looking for a video card that can handle all the next gen games. I was looking in the G-force region. Well if youve got ides for me can you also tell me if id need to upgrade my power supply also. ty
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Sep 10 2007, 03:23 AM
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#2
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SM- the Man -The Myth - The Legend Himself Group: Members Posts: 457 Joined: 4-September 05 From: Drinking da rootbeers Member No.: 8,313 myCENTs:72.48 |
Interestingly enough I been talking gfx cards on trap17 and it falls in the line of gaming. If your looking in the Geforce cards plan to spend some good cash, because you would want to look at the 8800GTS, 8800GTX, and the 8600GTS series cards. I would check out newegg.com video card section to take a look what they have and compare prices. Then go to Cnet to check out to see if they have a benchmark for that card or just google the card with benchmark in the search.
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Sep 10 2007, 09:33 AM
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#3
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Teh Coder Group: Members Posts: 1,053 Joined: 18-April 06 From: Australia Member No.: 12,833 myCENTs:89.25 |
Yeah, you are pretty much looking at buying as recent as possible card.
Although I have heard of and read considerable talk about DirectX 10 based cards not performing well as opposed to DirectX 9 based cards (I think that applies to games not built with DirectX 10 in mind, which are still being made of course). So in the way of nVidia, I would say you'd be looking at the top DirectX 9 or DirectX 10 cards. Have a look around newegg maybe, they have reviews and stuff too (I think the site is popular with americans). |
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Sep 10 2007, 11:08 PM
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#4
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Techno-Necromancer Group: Members Posts: 1,018 Joined: 13-January 05 From: The Net Member No.: 2,127 |
If you're looking for a Geforce card for the purposes of playing the next gen games, you definitely want something in the 8 series. Which one depends on how serious you are about the graphics quality and frame rate of your games, as well as your budget. The high end 7 series are also good cards, and are very cheap now that the 8 series is out, but they don't have hardware support for DirectX 10. This doesn't mean they can't play DX10 games, they just won't be as fast at it as the DX10 cards such as the 8 series.
~Viz |
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Sep 10 2007, 11:54 PM
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#5
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Newbie [ Level 2 ] Group: Members Posts: 12 Joined: 9-September 07 From: U.S. Member No.: 24,727 |
Aight thanks guys Im gonna look into the direct X 10 capable cards. ty
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Sep 11 2007, 12:37 AM
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#6
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SM- the Man -The Myth - The Legend Himself Group: Members Posts: 457 Joined: 4-September 05 From: Drinking da rootbeers Member No.: 8,313 myCENTs:72.48 |
Have a look around newegg maybe, they have reviews and stuff too (I think the site is popular with americans). More like Obsessed with it |
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Sep 11 2007, 05:53 PM
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#7
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Premium Member Group: [HOSTED] Posts: 393 Joined: 9-March 07 From: Tucson, AZ Member No.: 20,794 |
You're better off going with ATI at this point...they're much more open with their drivers now, so there will be excellent linux ATI drivers and people will be able to create custom windows drivers as well.
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Sep 12 2007, 02:59 AM
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#8
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Colonel Panic Group: [MODERATOR] Posts: 2,881 Joined: 25-March 05 From: Toronto, Ontario, Canada Member No.: 3,233 myCENTs:22.53 |
You should get an ATi Radeon HD 2600. It's a great card. It has DX-10 built-in and I've heard good reviews behind it. I would recommend the ATi Radeon HD 2900 XTX if money isn't an issue here.
xboxrulz |
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Sep 12 2007, 03:49 AM
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#9
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Techno-Necromancer Group: Members Posts: 1,018 Joined: 13-January 05 From: The Net Member No.: 2,127 |
QUOTE(ethergeek) You're better off going with ATI at this point...they're much more open with their drivers now, so there will be excellent linux ATI drivers and people will be able to create custom windows drivers as well. Although NVidia drivers aren't open, they have full support for the cards capabilities in Linux. Also, due to the way NVidia does drivers and cards now, it is more likely that new drivers will benefit your card than ATIs under Linux. My understanding is that although ATI drivers are more open, the NVidia drivers still work better.~Viz |
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Sep 12 2007, 09:17 AM
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#10
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Premium Member Group: [HOSTED] Posts: 438 Joined: 28-January 06 Member No.: 10,925 |
Personally i prefer nvidia over ati, if your desperate for one now get an 8800gtx or gts depending on your performance tastes. Just remember though, the new 9 series (yes 9 series) is comming out in november this year which is ~2 months away. First card to come out is the 9800gtx that will retail around the mid/high end range in your country.
It has full support for DX10.1 and even more power than the 8800gtx, i'd rather wait 2 months for a card that will last quite a few years rather than get one now that won't last as long. Also, for power supply you'd probably be better off going for a 650-700W PSU. The one i have lined up is the 750W Thermaltake toughpower that will provide more than enough power for my high end gaming pc plus lots of room for upgrade. Get brand name power supplies, they are more efficient and personally i don't trust generic brand power supplies with high end components. Depending on your CPU as well, you might only need a PSU between 500-550W if it has a high efficiency rating. Hope it helps -HellFire |
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