Every now and then we go a little crazy here in the Guru3D trenches. Sometimes a product arrives that shines and makes your face smile. Even before you try the product, the unboxing itself is an experience of it’s own. See, we here at Guru3D serve a rather unique crowd, the men and women that crave the need for the best hardware. We love to play games, we love to pimp our PCs, and we adore high-end hardware. If you recognize some of that, you are a guru …
So every now and then, within that baseline of enthusiast hardware and gaming, we see a product that is just cool. And often, such products make no sense when we talk about the matter of money… no Sir. It’s the dark side of the hardware industry, the extravagant… the excessive gear.
And as such we today land at the offices of BFG, Built For Gamers… a year or two maybe three ago they signed an exclusive deal with Danger Den, the guys who make some awesome water-cooling blocks for CPUs and GPUs.
- Introduction
- A 101 on GTX 295 technology
- BFG GeForce GTX 295 H2O bundle and warranty
- Setup | Noise | Power consumption | Heat levels
- Compute Unified Device Architecture
- GeForce PhysX | PureVideo HD
- Photos - BFG GeForce GTX 295 H2O
- Photos - BFG GeForce GTX 295 H2O
- Photos - BFG GeForce GTX 295 H2O
- Test Environment & equipment
- VGA performance: Far Cry 2 (DX10)
- VGA performance: Call of Duty 5: World at War (DX9)
- VGA performance: F.E.A.R. - Perseus Mandate (DX9)
- VGA performance: Brothers in Arms: Hell’s Highway (DX9)
- VGA performance: Crysis WARHEAD (DX10)
- VGA performance: Mass Effect (DX9)
- VGA performance: Fallout 3 (DX9)
- VGA performance: DeadSpace (DX9)
- VGA performance: Left 4 Dead (DX9)
- VGA performance: 3DMark Vantage (DirectX 10)
- Overclocking & Tweaking
- Final Words & Conclusion
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