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Jeux vidéo : Amis des pixels ou de la Next generation bienvenues !
Sch@dows a écrit:je l'overclockerai dès fois l'OS sera installé. Biensûr je ne vais pas le pousser tout de suite à fond, mais un petit saut à 4 GHz se fait a priori sans effort (ni augmentation de voltage). L'idéal serait de voir jusqu'où je peux monté sans augmentation du voltage car ça tire toujours un peu sur la durée de vie du CPU.
Afloplouf a écrit:Je sens qu'on va rire à la sortie de GTA5.
The GeForce GTX 970 is that rarest of things in the graphics card market - a genuine game-changer. In fact, it's actually more like a cooked hand grenade strategically lobbed into the high-end GPU market, designed to cause maximum damage to the competition - but in the process impacting just as many Nvidia cards too. It costs £260, which is a lot of money, but its performance per pound ratio is so strong that some might say there's little point considering any other high-end GPU currnetly available - and that includes Nvidia's own flagship GTX 980.
Nvidia GeForce GTX 970 - the Digital Foundry verdict
It takes something really special to truly stand out in the graphics card market these days. Typically, AMD and Nvidia price their products according to the horsepower available, leading to a market where cost is firmly linked to performance, with only the top-end (often unattainable) parts bucking the trend, usually providing even less overall value in terms of performance per pound/dollar.
The GTX 970 is different. It doesn't quite hit the enthusiast gamer pricing sweet spot, but it offers so much raw performance that the additional premium makes it seem like a no-brainer. This is a £260 product that can beat cards that were retailing for almost double the price just a few months ago. Put simply, it's a radical shake-up of price vs performance in the gaming graphics space, and a remarkable product from a company that more usually adopts a premium pricing strategy for its top-end wares.
What's clear is that Nvidia no longer wants to make graphics cards based on its large, expensive GK110 chip - Titan, GTX 780 and 780 Ti are all targeted for termination with the release of GTX 970, which is smaller, cooler, more efficient - and crucially for Nvidia, cheaper to make. This process of clearing out the range has had an unfortunate effect on AMD's premium products - both the R9 290 and the 290X now look far too expensive and will need to be heavily discounted in order to remain competitive. Nvidia's own lower-end products are subject to price cuts as we speak and there are enticing prices on the GTX 770 and GTX 760 (780 and 780 Ti are also cut, but the GTX 970 still makes them look a little dear in our opinion). There's no sub-£200 Maxwell yet, but the arrival of the GTX 970 ensures that - indirectly - there are some nice bargains further down the stack too.
In summary, in our review of the GTX 980 flagship, we loved the new Maxwell chip's power efficiency, but there was no seismic shift upwards in top-end performance: Nvidia made a smaller, smarter processor that only offered marginal gains over the GTX 780 Ti. What we had was a great tech story, but not exactly an all-out enthusiast pleaser. What's clear now is that if we were looking for a radical, game-changing product, we were looking in the wrong place. The GTX 970 more than fits the bill: it brings the ultra high-end GPU experience that much closer to the mainstream to the point where the value offered here is almost ridiculous. As such, Nvidia's latest comes recommended without reservation.
Nvidia debuted its new technology at a recent conference in the USA, which we attended. Nvidia paid for travel and accommodation. However, the GTX 970 and the other graphics cards featured in this piece were tested at the Digital Foundry office.
Sch@dows a écrit:A vrai dire, je ne vois pas en quoi le portage depuis/vers la X1 serait facilité.
Comme dis au dessus, je ne considère que le SLI dans le cadre de la 3D / Oculus. Etant donné que ce dernier n'est visiblement pas près d'arriver avant une bonne année encore, il n'y a aucun intérêt aujourd'hui à visé la carte très haut de gamme qu'est la 980 ... en particulier quand, comme moi, on joue sur une TV 1080p.Ialda a écrit:Pour le PC gamer on ne s'en fait pas, on sait tous que tu as prévu quelque chose à ce sujet-là d'ici la fin de l'année(alors, SLI de GTX 980 ? ^^ )
Sch@dows a écrit:Mais comme toi, je vois mal les développeurs revenir sur leur code pour proposé une version DX12 en plus des version DX9 et DX11. A voir également ce qui va advenir de ces précédente version. Est-ce que les devs vont abandonné DX9 (se privant des config modeste avec carte DX9/10.x) ?
Sch@dows a écrit:Je pense en effet, que DX11-x64 va devenir une norme pour les futurs jeux.
A voir si toutes les cartes DX11 seront compatibles / drivers mis à jour pour DX12.
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