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Review: NVIDIA ForceWare 180: GeForce GTX 260 performance realised?

by Parm Mann on 25 November 2008, 10:52

Tags: NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA)

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qaqab

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Final thoughts

NVIDIA states that revision 180 of its ForceWare driver will ensure performance boosts in a variety of 3D applications, and it does exactly that.

There's a healthy performance increase to be had on numerous titles, but we wouldn't go as far as to call it a Big Bang. Instead, it's more of a subtle spark that, when coupled with lower prices, makes products such as the 216-cored GeForce GTX 260 an increasingly tempting prospect.

Prospective buyers should be aware, of course, that prices fluctuate on a daily basis. Our suggested price of £193 for a 216-cored Palit GeForce GTX 260 from Scan.co.uk is currently available for pre-order only and pricing could therefore change.

It's also worth noting that NVIDIA's big bangs don't happen all too often. AMD, on the other hand, has Catalyst driver updates rolled out on a monthly basis - often packing performance boosts of its own.

Adding additional complication to the mix is increasingly-promising multi-GPU performance. Each driver release from either team appears to add a little something to CrossFire and SLI, putting us now at a stage where multi-GPU performance is such that a pair of reasonably low-cost cards are able to out-perform a single £200 option. Take for example the recently-reviewed dual Radeon HD 4830 setup - a £200 CrossFire solution that we feel would best NVIDIA's GeForce GTX 260 in most titles, regardless of ForceWare version.

Let's not get sidetracked, though. There are a great selection of graphics options currently available, many of which offer ample performance.

What NVIDIA has done is taken its existing offerings, added useful new software features, increased overall performance, and ultimately made its products all the more appealing.

If you're a user of NVIDIA's GeForce 200-series, 9-series, or 8800-series graphics cards, the latest ForceWare drivers are highly recommended and available to download from NVIDIA.com.



HEXUS Forums :: 23 Comments

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Well since you used the cheapest priced 260 you could find you could have done the same for the 4870 which would be £200 (also not in stock :p) http://www.aria.co.uk/Products/Components/Graphics+Cards/PCI-E/ATI+Radeon+4000+Series/Club+3D+ATI+Radeon+HD+4870+1024MB+PCI-E2.0+?productId=33741 raises the bang for buck up to 1.22 (still less than the 260 but closer).

If we look at available to buy today (in stock cards from Scan) then the 260 is available for £250 the 4870 for £210 which alters the bang for buck to 1.15 for the 4870 and 1.03 for the 260.

Since the review will not be updated on a regular basis to show changes in price and their effect on the bang for buck perhaps using cards which are actually available to buy when the review is published would be a better measure? As you yourself say its a pre-order card and the price may change (and its unlikely to go down if it does!).
Something for nothing is nice, for people who are already owners of these cards.
Two of my mates will be very pleased now for example :)
I'd like to do my own run through between my current drivers (176.something) and this 180 version on an 8800 ultra :)

I'll post up settings and results in the appropriate section of the forum (hopefully tonight).

It'll be good to see increases in performance similar to what Hexus saw on the GTX260 but alas, i do not have those games!!
sleepyhead
alas, i do not have those games!!

You could always download…




















the demos obviously! :P
Its good to see Nvidia giving a free performance increase here and with luck Ati will strive even harder with their drivers, so us the customers end up winning all around. Well I guess we now need to wait and see what Ati actually manages to do with its next driver set now I think thats out on the 10th December.