Final thoughts and rating
NVIDIA's release of the GeForce GT 430 GPU is interesting insofar as it's the first partner-produced Fermi product that's not designed as a gamer's card. Rather, given the reductions in architecture needed to hit a £60 retail price point, the GT 430 is positioned as a step-up from integrated graphics - suitable for basic gaming at a 1,280x1,024 resolution and, importantly, a good fit for a multimedia-focused PC.Partners are likely produce a slew of half-height GT 430 cards designed for small-form-factor PC chassis. The low-power nature of the GT 430 means that a few solutions will have passive cooling, which is a boon for folk looking to build a quiet PC.
We advise gamers to spend a little more cash and purchase a proper gaming card - something like a Radeon HD 5670 or the cheapest GeForce GTS 450 - because the difference in performance is immediate and tangible. GT 430 has rather better credentials with respect to multimedia usage, and HTPC buffs would do well to put it on their short-list.
Perhaps more importantly for NVIDIA, it now has a mainstream card that comfortably matches AMD's Radeon 5500-series GPUs on features and price, and that's hugely important when pitching to Dell and HP for inclusion in their next iteration of low-to-mid-range PCs.
Looking specifically at the reviewed ASUS ENGT430, due to retail for £60, we feel that the company misses a step by opting for an active-cooled heatsink that's also a little on the porky side.
The Good
Full feature-set. HDMI v1.4, PureVideo VP4, DX11
Can be designed with a low profile PCB and passive heatsink
Backed up by NVIDIA's CUDA-driven ecosystem
The Bad
ASUS card uses an active cooler
GT 430 would make a lot more sense at the magic figure of £49.99
Not a gamer's card
HEXUS Rating
ASUS GeForce GT 430 (ENGT430)
HEXUS Where2Buy
TBC.
HEXUS Right2Reply
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