upgrading 8800gt???

This topic is locked from further discussion.

Avatar image for desmith1231
desmith1231

512

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#1 desmith1231
Member since 2002 • 512 Posts

I want to upgrade sooooo bad to the 200 nvidia series, but since I waited this long would you think I might as well wait a little longer untill the new series comes out soon? What are your thoughts?

Avatar image for rock_solid
rock_solid

5122

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#2 rock_solid
Member since 2003 • 5122 Posts
i went from 8800GT to GTX260.... i'll keep the GTX260 for about a year after the new nvidia cards come out..because they should be more affordable then
Avatar image for Hekynn
Hekynn

2164

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#3 Hekynn
Member since 2003 • 2164 Posts
i went from 8800GT to GTX260.... i'll keep the GTX260 for about a year after the new nvidia cards come out..because they should be more affordable thenrock_solid
Yup I'm doing the same thing getting a GTX 470 this fall with new case and psu.
Avatar image for jhcho2
jhcho2

5103

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 2

#4 jhcho2
Member since 2004 • 5103 Posts

[QUOTE="rock_solid"]i went from 8800GT to GTX260.... i'll keep the GTX260 for about a year after the new nvidia cards come out..because they should be more affordable thenHekynn
Yup I'm doing the same thing getting a GTX 470 this fall with new case and psu.

Is that a good idea? Seeing as we know almost nothing about Fermi other than the fact that Nvidia is struggling with it.

Avatar image for 04dcarraher
04dcarraher

23858

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 0

#5 04dcarraher
Member since 2004 • 23858 Posts

[QUOTE="Hekynn"][QUOTE="rock_solid"]i went from 8800GT to GTX260.... i'll keep the GTX260 for about a year after the new nvidia cards come out..because they should be more affordable thenjhcho2

Yup I'm doing the same thing getting a GTX 470 this fall with new case and psu.

Is that a good idea? Seeing as we know almost nothing about Fermi other than the fact that Nvidia is struggling with it.

Their not struggling with it, The GTX 470 is faster then a 5850, and its faster in tesselation usage then the 5870. Then the 480 is a true Direct x 11 card that can use its features without taking a nose dive in performance. I skipped the 200 series and just went with SLI, it was cheaper and gives the same performance as the 200's. And when I decide to upgrade to Dx 11, I will keep one of my 8800's for physx, and sell the other one.

Avatar image for Blistrax
Blistrax

1071

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 0

#6 Blistrax
Member since 2008 • 1071 Posts

I want to upgrade sooooo bad to the 200 nvidia series, but since I waited this long would you think I might as well wait a little longer untill the new series comes out soon? What are your thoughts?

desmith1231

How much are you willing to spend? If you have no problem coughing up big bucks, and you can hang on about a year for nVidia to shake the bugs out and get the drivers working, by all means wait for the spawn of Fermi. If you're wealthy, or you just can't wait that long, get a GTX 295 (~500USD) next month after we see what the prices do. Do you Crysis at all? Then at least don't get anything less than a GTX 285 (~400USD), which will be just barely playable. These are my thoughts, and as such can be safely ignored.

Avatar image for Daytona_178
Daytona_178

14962

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 0

#7 Daytona_178
Member since 2005 • 14962 Posts

If you only use your video card for gaming then dont discount ATI, they are offering great cards at the moment. Also in my opinion its pretty crazy to buy a NVIDIA card until we see what Fermi really can do via reliable benchmarks.

Avatar image for NamelessPlayer
NamelessPlayer

7729

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#8 NamelessPlayer
Member since 2004 • 7729 Posts
I don't think it's a good time to replace the 8800 GT just yet. Maybe when I start seeing DX11 cards that maintain a constant 60 FPS on any game currently released maxed-out, and all for US$250-300... As for ATI, I wasn't really fond of their drivers, but it seems that desktop parts that haven't been given the legacy driver treatment still work well. (Don't get me started on pre-DX10 notebook GPU drivers, though...)
Avatar image for desmith1231
desmith1231

512

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#9 desmith1231
Member since 2002 • 512 Posts

I don't think it's a good time to replace the 8800 GT just yet. Maybe when I start seeing DX11 cards that maintain a constant 60 FPS on any game currently released maxed-out, and all for US$250-300... As for ATI, I wasn't really fond of their drivers, but it seems that desktop parts that haven't been given the legacy driver treatment still work well. (Don't get me started on pre-DX10 notebook GPU drivers, though...)NamelessPlayer

I pretty much agree with what you are saying.

-Thanks for the advice!

Avatar image for -CheeseEater-
-CheeseEater-

5258

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

#10 -CheeseEater-
Member since 2007 • 5258 Posts

If you only use your video card for gaming then dont discount ATI, they are offering great cards at the moment. Also in my opinion its pretty crazy to buy a NVIDIA card until we see what Fermi really can do via reliable benchmarks.

Daytona_178
Agreed. Hold out a few more months Topic Creator.
Avatar image for ionusX
ionusX

25778

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 8

User Lists: 0

#11 ionusX
Member since 2009 • 25778 Posts

If you only use your video card for gaming then dont discount ATI, they are offering great cards at the moment. Also in my opinion its pretty crazy to buy a NVIDIA card until we see what Fermi really can do via reliable benchmarks.

Daytona_178

this right here is all the advice i can give. so far weve seen very little and joke data regarding the fermi architectures real capabilities. tbh the way it looks now im calling the 470 a pointless buy for minor improvements over the already OP 5850 and the 480 an overpriced upgrade to a 5870. the 460 imho will be either below or above the 5830 but by how much im not at liberty to say.