Conclusions of a casual gamer
I am a rather casual gamer. I want performance when I need it, and I want to have a quiet, low power and low temp card. Quiet being more important when I'm not gaming, when I'm gaming I don't mind a little fan noise. I'm aiming for a 5850 in the near future.
Based on this review I can say at least the following:
1. Power consumption / temps
Load temps under 80C for a high end card are, imo, to be classified as
good.
An idle power consumption of 27w is very nice since I spend much more time on desktop (2D clocks) than I do in-game.
A power draw of around 150w in-game, even at the most intense games on the market today, is something I can very well deal with. Extreme benchmarks drawing over 200w might be a little over the top but that's 5870 results whereas I'm aiming for a 5850. A review on a "real" 5850 will be able to provide me with this intel and I want to see that before I buy one.
2. Performance
Per dollar, performance is still a bit less than expected. I take note that the initial sales price will go down in a couple of months though. When the 5850 hits the $200 mark, I expect it to be one of the best in bang-for-buck.
Per watt, as I said above about power consumption, I am impressed. Very impressed. The figures for the 5850 are bound to be even a little more positive.
The pure performance level is right up my alley. The 58XX family is right in the league of yesterday's high-end cards, and the simulated 5850 performance is actually better than I expected, being relatively close to the 5870. Performing up and around a GTX285, but with bearable power consumption and heat output, the 5850 looks like the new mid-end blockbuster to me.
3. Sound
Sound figures are a little disappointing on the 5870, and I'll have to wait for a 5850 review to see if the reference cards rock my socks even in that department. Of course, fitting a custom cooler is not a big deal as far as I'm concerned, but I'd love to once again see a stock cooler I am actually happy with.
4. Overclocking
The thing that hit me most was the overclocking portion of this review. Whereas core clocks can obviously still be increased the same way as usual, tuning the memory clocks by constantly running FPS benchmarks sounds a little awkward to me. Then again, I am a little lazy for an overclocker
Conclusion
The review gives quite a good impression of what to expect from a 5870. I'll be waiting on a review of an actual 5850 to confirm my expectations and I'll be waiting for a price drop before I buy a 5850.
If my GFX would break today, I'd
still get a second hand card for cheap and wait until the price and information levels are more pleasing. On the other hand, if I would be planning to get a GFX for the holiday season, chances are
very high I will get one of these babies.