“Our short time with the GTX 285 has left me pretty impressed – even though the GTX 280 was the top performing single GPU graphics card on the market, the GTX 285 easily outpaced it by about 10-15% in my tests. Even at real-world resolutions like 1600×1200 and 2048×1536 the GTX 285 was able to run noticeably faster than the GTX 280 OC.”Here are some more Graphics Card articles from around the web:
- GeForce GTX 285: 55nm Enabling Higher Performance @ AnandTech
- EVGA GeForce GTX 285 SSC Edition @ [H]ard|OCP
- Asus EN GTX285 1GB Graphics Card @ OC3D
- NVIDIA (GIGABYTE) GeForce GTX 285 – another high-end contender @ HEXUS
- Asus ENGTX285 TOP Review @ OCC
- VIDIA GeForce GTX 285 Unveiled @ HotHardware
- Inno3D GeForce GTX 285 Overclock Graphics Card @ Tweaktown
- ASUS ENGTX285 1GB video card review @ Elite Bastards
- GeForce GTX 285 review | 3-way SLI @ Guru of 3D
- EVGA GeForce GTX 285 SSC Edition Review @ Hardware Canucks
- Asus ENGTX285 TOP (Geforce GTX 285) @ CPU3D
- GIGABYTE GeForce GTX 285 Graphics Card @ Tweaktown
- Zotac GTX285 AMP! Edition @ t-break
- EVGA GeForce GTX 260 Core 216 Superclocked @ X-bit Labs
- CoolIT to deliver liquid cooling to GeForce GTX 295 Video Cards @ Legit Reviews
- NVIDIA GeForce GTX 295: Leading the Pack @ AnandTech
- Palit GeForce 9800 GTX+ Video Card NE/98TX+XT352 @ BmR
- GeForce 185.20, ambient occlusion tested @ Techconnect Magazine
- NVIDIA GeForce To Quadro Soft-Mod Guide Rev. 4.0 @ TechARP
- Nvidia GeForce 3DVision & How 3D Works @ bit-tech
- GeForce Takes 3D Mainstream @ ExtremeTech
- 3D Vision for GeForce Benchmark Performance Impact @ BmR
- Sapphire Radeon HD 4870 X2 ATOMIC 2GB video card review @ Elite Bastards
- Sapphire HD 4550 512MB Review @ OCC
- Sapphire HD 4850 X2 @ Neoseeker
- HIS Ice4 TurboX Radeon HD4850 Videocard Review @ Tweaknews
- Palit’s Revolution 700 (Radeon HD 4870 X2) graphics card @ bit- tech
- ATI Radeon HD 4850 X2 vs. Nvidia GeForce GTX 280: Decisive Battle @ X-bit Labs
- Evolution of ATI’s Catalyst Driver for Radeon HD 4870 @ X-bit Labs
A small increase

Seeing as how Ryan has somehow managed to suppress his need
to sleep, there is a brand new review up this morning, of nVIDIA’s GTX 285 1GB graphics card. For around $400 you can grab the card that is replacing the GTX280, with higher clock speeds and a die shrink. On the other hand, for about $50 more you can get an HD4870 X2, which does tend to perform a bit better than nVIDIA’s newest. Check out the full review.