- Joined
- May 22, 2015
- Messages
- 13,836 (3.95/day)
Processor | Intel i5-12600k |
---|---|
Motherboard | Asus H670 TUF |
Cooling | Arctic Freezer 34 |
Memory | 2x16GB DDR4 3600 G.Skill Ripjaws V |
Video Card(s) | EVGA GTX 1060 SC |
Storage | 500GB Samsung 970 EVO, 500GB Samsung 850 EVO, 1TB Crucial MX300 and 2TB Crucial MX500 |
Display(s) | Dell U3219Q + HP ZR24w |
Case | Raijintek Thetis |
Audio Device(s) | Audioquest Dragonfly Red :D |
Power Supply | Seasonic 620W M12 |
Mouse | Logitech G502 Proteus Core |
Keyboard | G.Skill KM780R |
Software | Arch Linux + Win10 |
I believe this is a try-before-you-buy move. You can at least fire up an RTX enabled title or demo and check whether you deem it worthy before shelling out the $$$ for Turing.It’s not an about face. It’s a clever move by Nvidia to show that the top Pascal card can only do RTX barely, at a playable FPS.
It’s meant to convince the hesitant people to get RTX cards after they see what their Pascal’s cannot or can only barely do.
Also, it seems to have flown under eveybody's radar, but these drivers seem to also have enabled Vulkan RTX.