The GPU is still way more important than the CPU in gaming. An old Sandy Bridge i7-2600k with a 1080 is going to be probably impossible to tell from a Skylake i7-6700k, or one of the 8 or 10 core Broadwell-E CPUs if you crank up the eye candy settings (where it becomes GPU limited). To a point you're far better off buying a high end graphics card and skimping on the CPU if you're into gaming. IE: You're way better off with a $300 CPU and a $600 graphics card than a $800 CPU and a $200 graphics card. Depending on the game you could probably get away with something like an i3-4370 and not be able to tell the difference.The specs are very impressive but at that price point I think I'll have to pass for a good long while. What kind of monster rig do you need in order to not bottleneck one of these bad boys anyway?
First looks from reviewer-types seem pretty meh.
I'm actually more interested in what kind of magic AMD thinks that they can weave at the mainstream level.
First looks from reviewer-types seem pretty meh.
I'm actually more interested in what kind of magic AMD thinks that they can weave at the mainstream level.
I also didn't get that impression from what I read in the coverage of their event in Texas Friday night.First looks from reviewer-types seem pretty meh.
I suspect that this may have to do with whether said reviewers want to get free hardware from nVidia.I don't know which reviewers you've been reading/listening to but the ones I've seen have been impressed so far.
I suspect that this may have to do with whether said reviewers want to get free hardware from nVidia.
The feeling that I got is that this was more or less what folks were expecting, but they'd really like to get their hands on the cards to see how they do. The shindig in Texas was a lot of smoke and light to distract people from whatever AMD is going to say at Computex. AMD has lowered expectations pretty good, so who know what nVidia is afraid of.
Nobody's released a real review. They're all under NDA.
I haven't seen anybody who has a good theory on WTF is up with Founder's Edition cards. They're going to make reference cards forever and charge more?
I heard that Founder's Edition are basically the only cards to come with the reference cooler. This is supposed to be really good. Of course, I might not even test mine before sticking a waterblock on it.
My biggest single knock against nvidia GPUs is that the cooling solutions seem to be of uniformly poor quality. They suck and die, followed swiftly by the rest of the card. Why would I want nvidia's reference cooler in the first place? Why would anyone?
32% faster than the 980 Ti at every resolution
32% lead over AMD’s Radeon R9 Fury X.
Meanwhile against the slightly older GTX 980, that gap is 70%.
I think it's crazy that we're still seeing increases like these from generation to generation of GPUs when we see small fractions of these jumps from generation to generation of CPUs.
Wouldn't you buy a computer-only GPU if that was your concern?
Still haven't found a 1080 from a reputable seller that has more than the single 8-pin power connector. Based on the reviews, this seems to resolve a potential bottleneck in overclocking. I would love that card with the EK waterblock on it, but haven't found that either.
AIB 1080's have more than one 8-pin connector. The FE ones do not. However, the chip's design is the bottleneck in overclocking. Short of LN2, better cooling and more power connections aren't going to help with overclocking.Still haven't found a 1080 from a reputable seller that has more than the single 8-pin power connector. Based on the reviews, this seems to resolve a potential bottleneck in overclocking. I would love that card with the EK waterblock on it, but haven't found that either.
Do you need open loop? If not, here's a closed loop seahawk review: http://www.guru3d.com/articles_pages/msi_geforce_gtx_1080_sea_hawk_x_review,40.html
AIB 1080's have more than one 8-pin connector. The FE ones do not. However, the chip's design is the bottleneck in overclocking. Short of LN2, better cooling and more power connections aren't going to help with overclocking.
Closed loop is fine. I'm not having an issue reading about it; I want to buy one right now, and can't find a reliable source.