As we wrote in an earlier article, the Nvidia GeForce GTS 250 series is not something really new and innovative, yet is a good combination of technical characteristics and price. The model with 1024 megabytes of graphics memory and a full-featured G92b core has a recommended price of $149. The higher-class product GeForce GTX 285 comes at an official recommended price of $399 and its retail price even starts from $340 now.
We know that Nvidia’s single-chip flagship can successfully oppose the ATI Radeon HD 4850 X2 as well as a CrossFireX tandem consisting of two ordinary Radeon HD 4850 cards. Considering that two GeForce GTS 250 1GB cards cost about $300, we wonder how good this pair would be in SLI mode. Theoretically, this configuration has a chance to beat the GeForce GTX 285 because it has more shader processors (256 against 240) and more texture processors (128 against 80). Additionally, the G92b chip can be clocked at higher frequencies than the G200b.
- EVGA GeForce GTS 250 Superclocked Edition
- Gigabyte GV-N250OC-1GI
- EVGA GeForce GTS 250 Superclocked Edition and Gigabyte GV-N250OC-1GI: Power Consumption, Temperature, Noise and Overclockability
- Testbed and Methods
- Performance in First-Person 3D Shooter
- Performance in Third-Person 3D Shooters
- Performance in RPG
- Performance in Simulators
- Performance in Strategies
- Performance in Semi-Synthetic Benchmarks
- Conclusion
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