Posted by : Unknown Selasa, 18 Februari 2014


Written by Katie Allen on 18 February 2014 at 17:45
AMD has been dominating the cheaper end of the GPU market for the last few months, and have only added to the spread of cards available around the $100 mark recently following the unveiling of the AMD Radeon R7 250, R7 250X, R7 260 and R7 260X cards.
Unsurprisingly, however, it hasn’t taken long for Nvidia to step up the competition. Its GeForce GTX 750 and GeForce GTX 750 Ti cards launched today and, having seen their competitive specs earlier this week, we now have a competitive price to accompany it…

We were promised on their announcement that the GeForce GTX 750 Ti and 750 would be filling Nvidia’s $100-$150 market. This was confirmed upon the launch of the two cards earlier today. The GeForce GTX 750 comes in at $119, exactly the same as the recent Radeon R7 260X. Meanwhile, the slightly more powerful GeForce 750 Ti has price competition from the Radeon R7 265; both cards fill the $149 price placement.

Looking at benchmarks for the two cards for Battlefield 4 and Bioshock Infinite, we can see that both manage to perform well against AMD cards in the same price range, and both hit well above the psychological 30FPS barrier on high and ultra settings.

As you can see, the performance difference between the 750Ti and 750 and their AMD competitors is not particularly significant. Whilst the GeForce GTX 750's predecessor the GeForce GTX 650 was not included in this benchmark test, the new GeForce 750 Ti shows a massive performance increase of nearly 25% compared to the 650 Ti that it succeeds.

The GeForce 750 Ti's strong performance is equally evident in Battlefield 4 benchmarks. Unsurprisingly, the AMD cards sneak ahead here by some margin in the AMD-optimized games, although the new additions to the Nvidia line-up still show strong FPS rates on High settings at 1080p.
It will no doubt prove something of a disappointment for many that the GeForce GTX 750 and GeForce GTX 750 Ti will not support SLI, unlike its their obvious competitors, the AMD R7 260X and R7 265 , which do implement CrossFire support. However, considering the extremely low power consumption of these two cards, their performances are very impressive, and they look more than set to rival their AMD equivalents at the $100 - $150 mark, performing well in Benchmark tests against similarly priced cards.
What do you think of the Nvidia GeForce GTX 750 and GeForce GTX 750 Ti? Do they look like worthy market competitors from Nvidia? Let us know what you think by leaving a comment.
You can check out Pip’s article - which has a full rundown of the specifications of these two cards as well as an explanation of their new Maxwell architecture.

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