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NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 Ti Founders Edition

2160P not even impressed. My 2x 1070Ti's in SLI still spank the newer stuff unless its 2x 3090's in Sli. 4k gaming is where it's at and the problem is without SLi it like running in slow motion. I pushing my games around 100 fps in SLi. Heck I bet my 660 Ti's in SLI would beat the 3060ti in 1080P benchmarks. I understand directx 12 does not support it much but most games today still running dx11. Imagine if two 3060ti's was allowed to run SLi it would be 800.00 ish for same performance of a 3080 or better. But Nvidia is not only allowing the super rich afford 4k gaming.

DX12 supports SLI/Crossfire. The setup of multi-gpu, however, needs to be configured in DX12 by the developer. If it's not setup, then having multiple cards won't do you any good.

DX11/10/9 SLI support is only possible through drivers done by Nvidia. Nvidia has announced they will no longer support SLI, so even if any new games release under DX11, without driver support multiple cards won't mean squat.
 
A great card except:
  • Ridiculously overpriced and people are seemingly not concerned at all. Like really? The GTX 970 launch price was $330!

GTX 900 series is an interesting point because it was on 28nm. Per-transistor cost reductions slowed down somewhere around this point.

1606854359833.png


Per chip costs are going up for GPUs (with significant transistor counts increments each generation). I doubt we'll see $300-350 upper mid-range cards ever again.
 
Don't know if I'd call $400 mainstream. The GTX 960 launched at $200, literally half the price. That's where the mainstream pricing should be and no amount of inflation can account for a doubling of price.

It is amazing to me that more people are not calling out the pricing.

I'm also wondering this, yes prices do go up but this is just crazy and not what I would call mainstream at all.

Tho I noticed this trend lately around here, certain ppl calling 4k gaming the new standard and 400-700$ GPUs completely normal priced and affordable to the average user.

While I don't want to be mean or anything but imo those ppl need a reality check and also realize that the world/market is bigger than USA and prices and values can be completely different depending on where ppl live.

I was a part of a Discord server for around 1 year, hardware/gaming related and there were like 300-400 ppl from all over the world and most of the ppl there had budget systems ranging from 750 Ti-s/1030s and other budget cards and the 1060s/RX 580s were already in the minority.
High end users were only a few.

So far the new gen cards 'both AMD and Nvidia' are nothing but completely overpriced things only for the higher end/richer users.

At this rate we gonna pay 300+$for a RTX 3050 in my country if it ever exists?What a joke.:wtf:
 
Don't know if I'd call $400 mainstream. The GTX 960 launched at $200, literally half the price. That's where the mainstream pricing should be and no amount of inflation can account for a doubling of price.

It is amazing to me that more people are not calling out the pricing.

For a start, the Ti isn't the same as the regular card, it's historically been priced at $300 not $200.

GTX 260 core 216 (like a Ti) = $300
GTX 465 (basically a 460Ti) = $280
GTX 560Ti = $290
GTX 660Ti = $300

Inflation from back then means that $300 is about $350 now and you have to account for not just inflation but also the trade sanctions against China that now hurt pricing too.

So calling them out for pricing these at $400 is baseless. If anything, the cut from 970 to 960 was much greater than typical for that generation so the 960 at $200 was simply priced according to its reduced performance. If you want further evidence of that, the vanilla GTX 760 that came before it was $250 and the 1060 that came after it was also $250. The 960 itself is a pricing anomaly so basing your argument on it alone is a mistake.

Perhaps Nvidia wanted to price the 960 at $250 but they couldn't because the old HD7950 was really close in performance and those were still selling for $160 with 50% more GDDR5 than the 960 too. The same card, rebranded to the R9 280 was also only $200 and had been in the market for a few months already, so there were discounts on that too; The 960 brought competition to the $200 price point but wasn't really a good deal even then because the market price of the competition was lower than the MSRP suggested. Sure, the GTX 960 sold but it wasn't an easy recommendation for people on a strict budget as the 2GB cards were already starting to struggle in some games and 3GB cards with similar performance were available for less; All it had going for it was lower power consumption.
 
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I'm also wondering this, yes prices do go up but this is just crazy and not what I would call mainstream at all.

Tho I noticed this trend lately around here, certain ppl calling 4k gaming the new standard and 400-700$ GPUs completely normal priced and affordable to the average user.

While I don't want to be mean or anything but imo those ppl need a reality check and also realize that the world/market is bigger than USA and prices and values can be completely different depending on where ppl live.

I was a part of a Discord server for around 1 year, hardware/gaming related and there were like 300-400 ppl from all over the world and most of the ppl there had budget systems ranging from 750 Ti-s/1030s and the 1060s/RX 580s were already in the minority.

So far the new gen cards are nothing but completely overpriced things only for the higher end/richer users.

Edit: added higher end 10X0 cards -

Really has nothing to do with being in the US.

Steam HW survey pretty much says it all, I just totaled percent of users on 20X0 cards + 5700 / XT + 5600 / XT + 1070 / 1080 variants and it is about 21%. That would imply that 78%+ of gamers are using a 1660 Ti \ 5500 XT or less.

Using that metric - and usually when we talk about midrange it means where half are above this and half are below this - even a 1660 or 5500XT could be considered high end.

Looks like you have to drop all the way down to 570 / 1050 Ti / 1650 to be middle of the pack.
 
Edit: added higher end 10X0 cards -

Really has nothing to do with being in the US.

Steam HW survey pretty much says it all, I just totaled percent of users on 20X0 cards + 5700 / XT + 5600 / XT + 1070 / 1080 variants and it is about 21%. That would imply that 78%+ of gamers are using a 1660 Ti \ 5500 XT or less.

Using that metric - and usually when we talk about midrange it means where half are above this and half are below this - even a 1660 or 5500XT could be considered high end.

Looks like you have to drop all the way down to 570 / 1050 Ti / 1650 to be middle of the pack.

I get that yea but what I meant is that ppl who comment such things are mainly from richer countries and USA.

Anyway I digress, its just what I observed in the past months and I will never agree that a 400$ 'in reality 500-700$' card is mainstraim or ever will be for most ppl.

Theres like a 90% chance that I will buy a RX 5600 XT in January and that will be my card for the next ~3 years 'I keep my cards for 2-3 years always', was hoping that maybe I could grab the lower end new gen cards but seeing these prices yea aint happening.
 
Okay here is the big question.

What time do they go up for sale?
 
I registered here to give my special thanks to W1zzard for all these fantastic reviews.

Thanks again for the awesome work. I can imagine how hard and time consuming these reviews and charts can be, but know that we are all very grateful for that hard work.

Keep it up please. :)
 
Don't know if I'd call $400 mainstream. The GTX 960 launched at $200, literally half the price. That's where the mainstream pricing should be and no amount of inflation can account for a doubling of price.

It is amazing to me that more people are not calling out the pricing.

Mainstream for me is still $200-$300. But that’s now the domain of x50 parts. Which is fine to be honest as those cards still work well for 1080p. A $400 3060 is definitely not mainstream.
 
Nice price/perf if they can sell at $400, but I doubt they will be reaching that soon. Foundry undercapacity coupled with enlarged demand (from miners and analytics) mean we will have to get comfortable with elevated prices for the next few years. On the bright side for mainstream gamers RX 570 can be had for less than $150. Still plenty powerful for 1080p gaming.

Mainstream for me is still $200-$300. But that’s now the domain of x50 parts. Which is fine to be honest as those cards still work well for 1080p. A $400 3060 is definitely not mainstream.
If 1080p is mainstream gaming, then x50 cards are more than capable.
 
"NVIDIA's GeForce RTX 3060 Ti comes at incredible pricing of $399 "
It's incredible literally, because no one believes it. :roll:
 
This seems like a great replacement for my 1080 8GB, similar wattage and a good chunk more performance.

It's hurting me inside how power hungry modern GPU's are tho :(
 
I be fine getting 2070 super for $300 but that won't happen any time soon as people still asking $500 for their old shit. Everybody wants to sell their old crap use the money to upgrade and profit $100 on top.
 
But will you play those indefinitely? Its generally pretty samey, but new engines do present a different sort of load that does work out differently on newer architectures, too. The overall relative performance is where its really at, I think, and then for your specific resolution (and a higher one you might target). Games do get sequels much like BL3 and TW3 did, and engines do get updated. With a new console gen, big changes happen. Point is, those two games only tell you about those two games - their number becomes less relevant as time passes and the engine gets outdated.

Bigger datasets generally improve accuracy ;)

Won't argue with that, however if I'm gonna sink hard earned cash into a card, it would be based on the games I own/play currently.

Oh wait, I just realized we dropped RX 480 from the test group for last rebench, only RX 580 now. But you should be able to extrapolate

View attachment 177753View attachment 177754

Now that's service :)

Thanks
 
So I assume <€200 GPUs is a thing of the past now.

If so that's a huge problem. The vast majority of the PCs I have sold have had GPUs at $200 USD or under.

Gt 1030 replacement incoming at $150 :laugh:

That's for the DDR3 version, gotta pay at least $200 for that GDDR5.

I'm also wondering this, yes prices do go up but this is just crazy and not what I would call mainstream at all.

Tho I noticed this trend lately around here, certain ppl calling 4k gaming the new standard and 400-700$ GPUs completely normal priced and affordable to the average user.

While I don't want to be mean or anything but imo those ppl need a reality check and also realize that the world/market is bigger than USA and prices and values can be completely different depending on where ppl live.

I was a part of a Discord server for around 1 year, hardware/gaming related and there were like 300-400 ppl from all over the world and most of the ppl there had budget systems ranging from 750 Ti-s/1030s and other budget cards and the 1060s/RX 580s were already in the minority.
High end users were only a few.

So far the new gen cards 'both AMD and Nvidia' are nothing but completely overpriced things only for the higher end/richer users.

At this rate we gonna pay 300+$for a RTX 3050 in my country if it ever exists?What a joke.:wtf:

For sure the bulk of the market is in the lower price segments. I don't see this pricing being healthy for the PC platform in general.

Mainstream for me is still $200-$300. But that’s now the domain of x50 parts. Which is fine to be honest as those cards still work well for 1080p. A $400 3060 is definitely not mainstream.

The RX 480 / GTX 1060 had 1080p down pretty well years back and the launch price of the RX 480 was $200. The 1650 is slower and the 1660 is not much faster and priced higher. That's considering the RX 480 was launched 4 years ago.

The lack of improvement in price to performance is a problem, especially for budget cards.
 
For a start, the Ti isn't the same as the regular card, it's historically been priced at $300 not $200.

GTX 260 core 216 (like a Ti) = $300
GTX 465 (basically a 460Ti) = $280
GTX 560Ti = $290
GTX 660Ti = $300

Inflation from back then means that $300 is about $350 now and you have to account for not just inflation but also the trade sanctions against China that now hurt pricing too.

So calling them out for pricing these at $400 is baseless. If anything, the cut from 970 to 960 was much greater than typical for that generation so the 960 at $200 was simply priced according to its reduced performance. If you want further evidence of that, the vanilla GTX 760 that came before it was $250 and the 1060 that came after it was also $250. The 960 itself is a pricing anomaly so basing your argument on it alone is a mistake.

Perhaps Nvidia wanted to price the 960 at $250 but they couldn't because the old HD7950 was really close in performance and those were still selling for $160 with 50% more GDDR5 than the 960 too. The same card, rebranded to the R9 280 was also only $200 and had been in the market for a few months already, so there were discounts on that too; The 960 brought competition to the $200 price point but wasn't really a good deal even then because the market price of the competition was lower than the MSRP suggested. Sure, the GTX 960 sold but it wasn't an easy recommendation for people on a strict budget as the 2GB cards were already starting to struggle in some games and 3GB cards with similar performance were available for less; All it had going for it was lower power consumption.

real fast the GTX465 wasn't faster than a GTX460, it was the stop gap because GTX460 GF104 wasn't ready yet.

Here is the Trend over the last decade for price per bracket for which series card, some things stick out Top end cards have move from 700 to 1200, the midrange moved from 250 to 499.

I think Nvidia has lost touch, the GTX 1660 was not a good replacement for the GTX 1060 6gb, it was more of a side grade and at times maybe 10% better, the real improvement meant moving up bracket and out of the midrange territory and into the range of the high end

A few oddites to notice, Geforce 3 was over priced but like the later Nvidia cards ATI had nothing to compete, and the GTX200 series is all over the place on launch prices, you can tell when AMD launched the HD4000 series, so it seems normally if Nvidia has competition prices go down, but not this time.

But going back in time the Geforce2 Ultra for 500 is only equal to about 750 in todays money, so its not just inflation

2000-3000GTX Titan ZGTX Titan VTitan RTX
1000-2000GTX 690GTX Titan Black, GTX TitanGTX Titan XGTX Titan X, GTX Titan XPRTX 2080 TiRTX 3090
700-10008800 Ultra9800 GX2GTX 590GTX 780 Ti
600-7007800 GTX 512, 7800 GTX 5127950 GX28800 GTXGTX 780GTX 980 TiGTX 1080 TiRTX 2080 Super, RTX 2080RTX 3080
500-600UltraTi 500, 3
Ti 4800, Ti 4600

FX 5800 Ultra, FX5900 Ultra, FX5950 Ultra
6800 Ultra Extreme7900 GTXGTX 280GTX 480GTX 580GTX 680GTX 980GTX 1080RTX 2070 Super, RTX 2070RTX 3070
400-5006800 Ultra7800 GT8800 GTS 640GTX 295, GTX 260GTX 670GTX 770GTX 1070 TiRTX 2060 SuperRTX 3060 Ti
300-400Pro, GTSTi 200Ti 4400FX 5800, FX 59007800 GS7950 GT, 7900GT8800 GTS 512, 8800 GTS 3209800 GTXGTX 285, GTX 260 216GTX 470GTX 570GTx 660 TiGTX 970GTX 1070
RTX 2060
250-300Ti6800 GT7900 GSGTX 275GTX 465GTX 560 Ti 448
GTX 1660 Ti
200-250Ti 4200FX 5900XT68008800GT9800 GTGTX 460GTX 560 TiGTX 660GTX 760GTX 960GTX 1060 6gbGTX 1660 Super, GTX 1660
150-200MX 400, MXMX 460FX 5700 Ultra, FX 5700, FX 5600 Ultra, FX 56006800 LE, 6600 GT7600GT8800GS, 8600 GTS9600 GTGTS 250GTX 460 768GTX 560GTX 650 Ti Boost, GTX 650 TiGTX 750 TiGTX 950GTX 1060 3gbGTX 1650 Super
100-150MX 440FX 5700LE, FX 5600 LE, FX 5200 Ultra66007600GS8600 GT9600 GSOGT 240GTS 450GTX 550 TiGTX 650GTX 750GTX 1050 Ti, GTX 1050GTX 1650
 
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So I'm not getting all these cards and the power draws.

Looking at this old review of a 980, it had a peak power consumption (not overclocked) of around 185W.

I remember ~5 years ago, word was nobody really needed a PSU > 600W unless they were doing crossfire or some such, and most people were fine with 450W which was rapidly becoming the norm.

Now we have 3060 Ti at > 200W peak loads, not OC'd.

Seems like these cards are made for the 1% of users that have rigs that can meet those specs, common here, but not so common in the wider market.

To make use of something like this 3060 Ti (and all other GPUs recently released) you need :
  • CPU no less than a 3600 or 9600, even then very CPU limited on 3070+ or 6800+, and even this 3060 Ti will get CPU limited quite a bit.
    • If you are on 2600 or 7700K even, esp with slower RAM, you'll be very disappointed
    • Just look at the benchmarks of these on the benchmarks forum on Tomb Raider, those CPUs will make a 3080 perform like a 2070 - 2070 Super
  • 600W+ power supply, 750+ for higher cards
So like, what % of users has this? It's gonna be close to zero. This kind of stuff might push a lot of people towards consoles.

Edit: This is what I'm talking about, ripped from that thread. A 3800X is 100% CPU limited with a 6800XT on Tomb Raider :

View attachment 177760
You're not wrong about the power draws increasing this generation, but a GPU running at ~210W, peaking at ~220W does not require a >600W PSU unless your build is really out there. Most PCs these days have one SSD, maybe one HDD, a few fans, perhaps an AIO pump, and that's it. Combine the GPU power draw with the real-world power draw of a CPU in a matching price range, like the 3600 or 5600X, you have about 300W, add in another 50-70W for the motherboard, RAM, storage and fans, and add another 20% or so for safety and margin for PSU wear. That leaves you with a minimum PSU of ~420-440W. So even a 500W PSU would be plenty and would leave you room for future upgrades too (though statistically the chance of someone moving significantly up in power level from their current GPU when they upgrade is rather unlikely - the far more likely thing is for them to buy a newer GPU in the same tier, with roughly comparable power draw). This of course assumes one buys PSUs of reasonable quality from reliable manufacturers, but that's a given.
 
I just imagined the Ozzymanreviews bloke saying "Yeah ... Nah , just nah" at 400 buckaroos for a maybe 250 to 275 $ worth.
 
If the standard 3060 comes out with 6GB VRAM and 10% slower than 3060Ti at 330usd, it's gonna be instant smash hit that could replace the almighty 1060 very soon.
 
That power efficiency is pretty good. Wonder if AMD cards in this perf segment can beat it


So, napkin math:

3070 - 5888 faux shaders (real figure: 2944)
3060Ti - 4864 faux shaders (real figure: 2432)
(note: just because shader can do fp+fp doesn't turn it into 2 shaders)

Drop vs 3070: 17.4%


6800 - 4608 shaders (6800 is 5%+ faster than 3070)
6700 - 2560 shaders

Drop vs 6800: 45%
Is rumored to hit 3Ghz, should still be slower, but much cheaper to produce too.


3060Ti is likely the chip NV hoped to label as 3070 or even 3070Ti, before Lisa hammered Jensen with RDNA2.

...and even the RX 6800 in raytracing...
I don't think it's a fair assessment of the cards capabilities, as RT perf varies wildly from Control to Dirt5 and with COD somewhere in the middle and with only 2 games tested one (both?) green sponsored.

1606896982485.png


$399 for something approaching a 2080S. Ampere offers theoretical improvements in performance/$ across the whole range.
Except 2080s is hard to be called a "fairly priced card".
 
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Once again TPU falls in the trap of nvidia and participate in the fraud of announcing an unavailable product at a fake MSRP.
Shame!
How could TPU control pricing/MSRP pretty please?

And it's not a secret figure either, you can see it with your eyes easily (unlike performance, which is what this site is testing)
 
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