“In this article we have decided to take a look at how one of the more desirable 5770s on the market performs in 5 of the most recent games (Black Ops, Fallout New Vegas, Medal of Honor, Civilization V and F1 2010). Our aim is to see how it plays at the highest ‘normal’ resolution of 1920×1080 with maximum in-game detail. Can the 5770 be the ideal solution for serious gamers on a budget?”Here are some more Graphics Card articles from around the web:
- ASUS EAH6850 DirectCU @ [H]ard|OCP
- AMD 6870 @ Overclockers.com
- AMD Catalyst 10.11 Windows 7 Driver Analysis @ Tweaktown
- AMD Radeon HD 68xx Graphics Cards in CrossFireX Configurations @ X-bit Labs
- Gigabyte HD 6850 review @ t-break
- Crossfiring the AMD HD6870 review @ The Inquirer
- Desktop Graphics Card Comparison Guide @ TechARP
- Zalman VF3000A Review @ OCC
- NVIDIA GeForce GTX 460 SE 1GB Review @ Hardware Canucks
- Asus ENGTX580 GeForce GTX 580 @ TechSpot
- Natural Born Winner: Nvidia GeForce GTX 580 @ X-bit Labs
- nVIDIA GeForce GTX 580 Video Card Review @ Hardware Secrets
- Gigabyte GTX480 SOC @ OC3D
- GIGABYTE GV-N480SO-15I Super Overclock @ techPowerUp
- Point Of View GeForce GTX 460 Beast 1GB Graphics Card Video Review @ eTeknix
How much Radeon do you need? Will a 5770 cut it?
Hardware Heaven has released a piece that examines the performance of the $140 XFX Radeon HD5770 in Call of Duty: Black Ops, Medal of Honor, F1 2010, Fallout New Vegas and Civilization 5 as well as playing BluRay movies. What they found was flawless performance pretty much across the board at a resolution of 1920×1080 with maximum detail levels. If you are playing on a smaller monitor and aren’t really planning on going with multiple displays in the near future, the HD5770 is a very reasonable upgrade if your GPU is getting a little older.