“We look at the 10 combined Radeon 4800 and GeForce 200 series configurations. Our evaluation scales from what you get when you spend $150 on a video card, to what gaming gains should be expected when you spend $1100 on 4870X2 CrossFireX . Real world gameplay and Apples-to-Apples as well.”Here are some more Graphics Card articles from around the web:
- Foxconn 9500GT-256FR3 OC @ Futurelooks
- XFX 9600 GSO XXX @ HEXUS
- XFX 9800GTX+ SLI @ motherboards.org
- Zotac 9800GTX+ Zone Edition @ t-break
- EVGA GeForce GTX 260 Core 216 Superclocked @ Guru of 3D
- Video Card Roundup @ OCC
- Arctic Cooling Accelero S1 Rev.2 Heatpipe VGA Cooler Review @ Tweaknews
- GeCube RADEON HD 3650 O.C. and Point Of View 9600 GSO/GT EXD @ Digit-life
- Sapphire Radeon HD 4670 512MB video card review @ Elite Bastards
- Sapphire Radeon HD 4670 512MB @ Phoronix
- PowerColor PCS+ HD 4870 1GB GDDR5 @ HotHardware
- Powercolor Radeon HD 4850 PCS+ @ bit-tech
- Faster, Cooler, Wider Radeon HD 4850 Cards @ ExtremeTech
- Palit Radeon HD 4870 Sonic Dual Edition @ Hardware Zone
- Asus EAH4870x2 TOP (2Gb GDDR5) @ CPU3D
Getting your money’s worth
Buying a video card is getting quite difficult, especially if you want good value. There are an incredible amount of choices right now, with tiers running from the $150 value cards to the $500 top of the line models. [H]ard|OCP takes you through the 48xx series from AMD and the 2xx series from nVIDIA to try to figure out which cards offer you the best value. Whichever price level you are looking at, this review covers it.