Thursday, June 25th 2009
Consider a GPU Upgrade Before CPU: NVIDIA
Ahead of the bulk of the crucial summer shopping season, NVIDIA sent a circular urging consumers to focus their PC upgrades on GPUs, rather than CPU and its platform. It thinks that if you have a reasonably good platform from last year or the year before, a GPU upgrade serves as a better price for performance increment when it comes to games. A slide explaining NVIDIA's advice was leaked (perhaps ahead of its formal publication, as it seems to be targeted at end-users and not intermediate customers or distributors).
Quite simply, the slide shows how upgrading the GPU is a more cost-effective way of increasing performance of a gaming PC, compared to upgrading the platform (CPU, compatible motherboard and memory). The side specifically targets the Intel Core i7 platform, and pits the upgrade path against upgrading the graphics components, keeping the rest of the PC constant, based on the common Core 2 Duo E8400. The price of this base system along with a GeForce GTS 250 GPU is measured at $506. A $159 upgrade to GeForce GTS 250 SLI sends the average FPS (application not mentioned) up to 54 from 42, likewise as you look further up the options NVIDIA provides. Upgrading the rest of the platform is making no performance impact on this application. The general idea conveyed is that for a gaming PC with recent generation hardware, better graphics is a better incremental upgrade. Choose with your wallet.
Source:
DonanimHaber
Quite simply, the slide shows how upgrading the GPU is a more cost-effective way of increasing performance of a gaming PC, compared to upgrading the platform (CPU, compatible motherboard and memory). The side specifically targets the Intel Core i7 platform, and pits the upgrade path against upgrading the graphics components, keeping the rest of the PC constant, based on the common Core 2 Duo E8400. The price of this base system along with a GeForce GTS 250 GPU is measured at $506. A $159 upgrade to GeForce GTS 250 SLI sends the average FPS (application not mentioned) up to 54 from 42, likewise as you look further up the options NVIDIA provides. Upgrading the rest of the platform is making no performance impact on this application. The general idea conveyed is that for a gaming PC with recent generation hardware, better graphics is a better incremental upgrade. Choose with your wallet.
84 Comments on Consider a GPU Upgrade Before CPU: NVIDIA
And they "flatlined" the upgrade performance from a Core2 to an i7 (sigh)
NVIDIA, maybe it's time to get (much) more apps running on your CUDA then try this again...
cos most games arent multithreaded yet...
but i think this kinda thing is only aimed at gamers:P
However, I'd still go with a video card. :) Most (if not all) games nowadays are GPU-limited, especially at high settings.
Thats fair enough, but even an e8400 @ 4.5ghz doesn't scale as well with a GTX 295 as an i7 rig. There should be more information available to people (noobs especially) on the correlation between CPU power and GPU output.
I'm guessing a 256MB 8600 GT running games at a resolution of 1920x1200 or higher, with full AA turned on
So IF i had a SLI mobo and a 250 would think about getting another 250 or better card. So what they say is right.
My next upgrade really has to be CPU\Mobo\Ram upgrade not a new card. Then again this also depends on the games you enjoy playing too.
Thing is I don't have a 250 so this NEWS is pointless to me.
All nVidia is saying is that if you have a mid-range CPU, and mid-range GPU, upgrading the GPU gives better performance. I totally agree with this.
Obviously, everyones situation is different, but in general there is nothing wrong with that statement.
It wouldn't be marketting if nVidia loaded it with details. This isn't a hardware review, it is a piece of marketting to get people to buy graphics cards over upgrading CPUs.
And there is nothing wrong, or unrealsistic, with that graph. If the setting are jacked up so high that it bogs the GTS250 down to the point where it only manages 42FPS, then upgrading the CPU/Memory isn't going to help.
This is not propaganda. It is a simple ad for Nvidia which provides truthful, accurate information.....just limited to specific task (gaming) to present their product in the best light.
Please put away your pitch forks and tar. Nvidia and Intel have been slinging mud like this since that lawsuit was first issued from Intel to Nvidia.