DirectX 10 is finally upon us and in order to power it, NVIDIA has given consumers the most powerful cards they have ever engineered. Codenamed G80, the GeForce 8800 Series is the most remarkable card in NVIDIA’s long and storied history. Currently available in two flavors, the GeForce 8800 GTX and its little and only slightly-less-powerful brother, the GeForce 8800 GTS. For this review, EVGA was kind enough to send me one of their GeForce 8800 GTS cards to complete my SLI pair and see just how well the latest architecture stacked up in SLI.
…I won’t lie: when I first saw the (seemingly) "crippled" specs of the 8800 GTS, I scoffed at the thought of using one or two of those cards when the GTX has SO much more power. But after using these for the past few weeks, I can say without a doubt that these cards are amazing. The almost-free antialiasing in a number of games, the overall amazing picture quality and DirectX 10 support are just three of MANY reasons you should own an 8800-based card.
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GeForce 8800 GTS VPU, 576 MHz , PCI Express Interface, 320-bit, 640 MB (GDDR3 SDRAM)