Metric Tensor wrote: » They are always going to piss around with naming conventions and "numbers" in order to maximise profit. I don't think people should be too concerned with comparing a 1080 with 2080 or 3080 - that's what nVidia wants you to do so you can be sure the naming is designed to maximise profit. I think it's better instead to compare price point. I paid circa €400 for my 1070 in 2016. The question I should ask is how much more performance can I get for €400* now - it doesn't matter if it's called the X-Pro-Max-Extreme-Eleventy-One or the Sh!tballer5000 - all the matters is the performance increase for the same price level. Then I can also decide if it's worth the investment or not ... or would I like to step up to the next price point or drop a level. *Probably should say 410 for inflation, etc.
H3llR4iser wrote: » The issue I see is that while the absolute performance increase is usually there (a GTX 1660Ti is as fast as a GTX 1070), what tends to happen is that the same amount of money tends to "drop back" one level in the relative scale at each generation of cards. The 400€ you mentioned, what would afford a GTX 1070, are now enough "only" for a 2060 Super. Which is indeed a level below where the 1070 positioned itself amongst its peers. To maintain the "position", I went for a 2070 Super, which set me back around 600 - which would have gotten you a GTX 1080 in the previous generation. Prices have since gone a bit down, but still.
The performance increase is 20% for the 3090 over the RTX 2080 Ti
Cordell wrote: » If that is true, and if the rumored prices are true, this will be very disappointing.
Cordell wrote: » There is no alternative AMD card at that price point, unless you're buying 2 of them
Rob2D wrote: » Ha, and people thought I was mad investing in a 1200W PSU. I knew this would happen someday. Getting ready to upgrade next year and my wallet is scared even thinking about it. €1000 would really want to be the limit I'd spend on a GPU. So hopefully it comes in at £1200-1300 and I'll knock a couple hundred off that in VAT with Amazon Business. But still, it's crazy money. And the alternative is to have an AMD card. Which is essentially akin to Russian Roulette.
spiritcrusher wrote: » Will there be any reasonably imminent knock on effect of these new cards on the 20 series' price do ye think? Building my first proper PC for gaming and the graphics card is the only thing I'm struggling to decide on! Was going to go for a 2060 but might just up the budget to around 500 for a 2070 super, but I'd hang on for a month if there was something better in that price (or a price reduction) on the way...
Cordell wrote: » Not only there is no value in having an oversized PSU, it actually makes it very inefficient to run it under such a low load, so it will waste more power than a properly sized one.