For many of you, the question is: buy now or wait for a DirectX 10 compatible card? The answer comes down to how often you upgrade your video card, and what games you are looking to play. If you are looking for more performance in current generation games, and are happy to spend another £200-300 when next generation hardware arrives, then both ATI’s Radeon X1900XT 256MB and Inno3D’s GeForce 7950 GT 512MB will suit your needs well, depending on the resolutions you’re looking to play at.
Inno3D’s GeForce 7950 GT is another good implementation of NVIDIA’s GeForce 7950 GT and it comes in at a decent price point too. At around £199.74 including VAT, it appears to be one of the better-priced GeForce 7950 GT cards on the market that come with 512MB of memory. On top of that, it comes complete with a decent cooling solution that is almost silent. XFX’s GeForce 7950 GT 570M Extreme is slightly faster than Inno3D’s card and is also completely silent, and the price premium seems to be just about worth it – you’re going to have to spend an extra £20 to get the XFX card.
» Inno3D iChill 7900GS Review
» XFX GeForce 8800 GTS 320MB XXX Edition Review
» BFGTech GeForce 8800 GTS Review
» Inno3D GeForce 7900 GS Review
» XFX GeForce 7950 GT 570M Extreme Review
» NVIDIA GeForce 7900 GS Group Test
» XFX 7600GT XXX Edition review
» Inno3D GeForce 6800GS SLI Review
» Diablotek nVidia GeForce 6600 256MB Review
» BFG GeForce 6600GT OC PCI-E Review
» HIS X800XL vs Sapphire X800XL 512 MB
» Gigabyte GeForce 6600 GT PCI-E Review
» Albatron Trinity GeForce 6800GT 256Mb Video Card Review
» Inno3D Geforce 6800GT Video Card Review
» Inno3D Tornado GeForce FX 5700 Ultra Video Card Review


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