GTA5 that's one titles I already said favors the 950 while again...
Here’s that review from way back Aug 15, it has a MSI 950 Gaming with (1317MHz MSI Boost OC) while I'm having difficulty deducing what 370 was used. Though they show a single fan XFX which at best is clocked fairly pedestrianly at 995Mhz... More like a 950 with Boost Clock of ≤1220Mhz.
You can't work out what clock the XFX 370 was running at? From the review you just referenced:
Meanwhile, the R7 370 offers a noticeably lower performance level, to the point where the majority of the run occurs at a sub-60fps frame-rate. If Nvidia set out with the objective of beating the Radeon card, it has succeeded - but we feel that the factory overclock emphasises the differential. MSI has added 103MHz to the base clock here (and a similar amount to its GTX 960 too), and just 55MHz to the Radeon
Reference clock for the 370 is 975MHz. XFX's choices for anything approaching a 55MHz bump on base clock are the
1040MHz Double Dissipations (actual 65MHz). Actual overclock over reference: 6.67% compared to the nominal 9.96% base/10.77% boost of the MSI card.
Oh, and just for the record...the video I posted actually comes from the same review you just linked to
I think the newer information that GhostRyder provided showing the latest drivers, and wide range of titles is more apropos.
Yet your whole argument up until now focuses on the card being paired with a processor more in line with the price segment....
Exactly, why I originally stipulated how/what I did. I'm always looking and don't see/find any reviews from such "OEM or other starter box" that would objectively pit a 950/370. Can you provide at least one?
...now when those lower cost processors are paired with the lower cost cards as per your original argument falls short (maybe you should actually read the Eurogamer link you supplied) you change the paradigm to NOW compare results obtained with an i7-6700K overclocked to 4.5GHz and 16GB of DDR4-3000. So you abandon your whole "OEM starter box" argument for high end test system when and where it suits your argument. Colour me unsurprised.
And the latest performance graph from a TPU indicates a 3% advantage to the GTX 950...
...2% advantage to the R7 370 is significant enough for you to highlight. Surely 3% advantage to the GTX 950 now also deserves the same same significance?
Wow spin much... I worked from a Desktop advertised a 6th Gen i5 Skylake, straddled with single channel DDR3. You come back that lowy APU (mostly Laptops) are single channel. The box I used was advertise as "Gaming"... though with an anemic GT 730.
Note the word predominantly:
single channel RAM is predominantly found in AMD APU-based systems
I've already canvassed the available systems from the larger OEMs (Dell, HP, Asus, Acer) and the larger share of budget OEM "starter boxes" featuring single channel RAM compared to the range as a whole are those paired with an AMD APU. Care to take a wager?
And the same can be said about you for Nvidia, though this no longer as any debate, but now resorting to personal jabs. Way to hold the professional high ground.
If I post recommending an Nvidia card over an AMD then it should be relatively easy to find proof of your assertion. You can do so, or you can ignore it and be shown to be trolling. I'll leave it with you. Personally I think it will be the latter.
I'm not faulting either if the price is appropriate, though I'm here in support of consumers. When pricing is commensurate for what you get that’s fine. Here today the discrepancy is again back to basically 20% (I found a rare instance where there was similar price, although depended on a higher rebate). I just want people just entering into gaming hearing the "present-day" information that a 370 does spar with 950's, so this “SE” part should not be looked upon as any “deal” if it holds at a $120 MSRP. Perhaps with a rebate down bringing it down to $100 just packs in an already tight field. That’s not an the issue as long as folks have information to deuce and comprehend such nuances in the market segment.
1. Nowhere in the article does it mention the cards MSRP, so assuming a $120 price tag and then basing an argument against your own assumptive pricing is unsound.
2. Depending on performance the pricing will dovetail with existing SKUs from both vendors. You hold TPU's review in high regard judging by your willingness to back the graph that Ghostryder provided, then maybe you should hold
this one in just as high esteem.