From Digital Foundry: "The next generation GPUs from Nvidia - and, as it turns out, AMD - have had a problem: pricing, or rather relative pricing. The issue is that with the Radeon RX 6800 XT and more so the GeForce RTX 3080, we've had GPUs that struck an excellent balance between price vs performance. Both were cut down compared to flagship models, but each retained the bulk of their gaming prowess. For whatever reason, their recently released equivalents - RTX 4080 and RX 7900 XT - have not been able to match the same sweetspot in 'frames for the dollar'. The new RTX 4070 Ti goes some way to addressing this, but still hammers home the point that extra performance and big price reductions are things of the past.
That said, the renamed RTX 4080 12GB does finally address the value challenge of the RTX 3080 to a certain extent. With a confirmed MSRP of $799/£799 - $100/£150 up on the RTX 3080 - you are getting value from the extra cash. Performance of the card is typically in RTX 3090 to RTX 3090 Ti territory. You're getting an extra two gigabytes of framebuffer memory. On top of that, there's DLSS 3, which hasn't yet established itself as the game-changer that DLSS 2 is, but is swiftly becoming very useful - game-changingly so in the case of The Witcher 3: Complete Edition."
Today, popular control peripheral manufacturer Virpil made the CDT-Aeromax flight stick available for pre-order.
It can't hold a candle to the QuickShot II Turbo with its gorgeous red and black decoy.
Mass Effect is under pressure after Dragon Age dropped the ball, but there's an alternate universe where Mass Effect came out first.
There is also an alternate universe where the core audience possesses greater understanding, and dont just demolish a game for being different from expectations. Its not this universe though.
The Game Boy Advance really advanced handheld gaming in its short life, but there are plenty of games for the little purple wonder that pushed the console to its limit.
If you're interested I cant recommend the Gamers Nexus review enough: https://www.youtube.com/wat...
Hard to consider anything in the 4000 series "worth the asking price" unless you've got money to burn. The 3000 series was priced right at MSRP, but there wasn't enough supply back then to keep them on store shelves (in combination with world events and aftermarket greed). But now there's a plenty of supply and Nvidia decides it's time to charge what the scalpers were asking for the 3000 cards for the 4000s? Forget it. I'll be waiting to see what they do with the 5000s in a year or two and hoping they go back to the 3000 series MSRP tiers.
The entire 4000 series is one big disgusting scam.
none of the newer GPUs from both nVidia and AMD are worth their asking price! if this is going to be the norm, goodbye and RIP budget PC gaming I guess as far as new components are concerned. budget PC gaming will now be relegated only to used parts.
yeah ok, good luck finding that thing at $800🤣😂