ATI has really stepped up their game in the last few years. With the release of it's 4-series, the Radeon HD cards really began to be a force to reckon with for Nvidia. Not only did they run cooler and consume less power than Nvidia's GeForce 200-series, but they also offered more performance for your money. As we are already seeing, this trend has continued into the current generation. The decision for DirectX11 PC gamers is between the Radeon HD 5-series and GeForce 400-series.
Between the price, performance and power draw, with the GeForce RTX 5060 Ti, NVIDIA nailed the mainstream formula.
Nvidia writes:
The Nintendo Switch 2 takes performance to the next level, powered by a custom NVIDIA processor featuring an NVIDIA GPU with dedicated RT Cores and Tensor Cores for stunning visuals and AI-driven enhancements.
The raytracing probably doesn't even equal a low end PC GPU, even if it did it would probably be mostly useless. They'll probably force it in some game now that will run like shit maybe 30fps at best, just because "it can do it"
Please. I'd like to play my switch games on my 4k tv without it looking all doodoo.
Nvidia could have said this months ago and cut the bullshit. Anyway the rumors were true.
I'm not expecting of anything from ray tracing but dlss will be the thing that sees the unit get some impossible ports.
AMD launches the Ryzen 9 9950X3D for $699 & Ryzen 9 9900X3D for $599, offering the best-in-class gaming & content creation CPU performance.
X3D really turned around AMD's cpu prospects. I wont touch intel now, vs 10 years ago I wouldn't imagine going anywhere near AMD cpu's for gaming only.
I guess the real question is how many compatibility issues will arise from their motherboard chipsets? also the selection of motherboards for AMD is more limited too. Which often limits what kind of form factor build you want. Last time around I avoided AMD due to their chipsets having horrid USB3 support with accessories. You tend not to see these kind of issues being talked about, it ends up just being games and synthetic benchmarks.
i've been told to go with ati for its processing power. and ati is a great brand but i wish i would have listened to the one friend who adviced me not to go with ati..
ati drivers are Sh!t.. while ati cards may be more powerful, nvidia cards are more stable and the drivers are more reliable..
ati is cheaper but nvidia has better drivers IMO. I'm using a msi cyclone 4890 OC and it does pretty well but I still liked using my 9800GT better just because I hate using the Catalyst control center. If you are planning on playing a lot of games and tweaking each one I'd go Nvidia but if you just play games and don't mess around with stuff like forcing AA in games that don't support it (everquest 2 UT engine games ect) then you can save some cash and go ATI.
I like the ATI's value over Nvidia's. Other than that they're pretty even.
about price versus performance then go with ATI.
If want the very best money can buy then buy Nvidia.
I'm personally more an ATI kinda guy.
Nvidia. <3