Gigabyte GTX 1050 Ti G1 Gaming 4 GB Review 33

Gigabyte GTX 1050 Ti G1 Gaming 4 GB Review

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Introduction

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The sub-$200 market-segment has been NVIDIA's problem area in terms of price-performance competitiveness with AMD, even though the company has had higher volumes. Most games released for the competitive gaming crowd run great on sub-$300 graphics cards, and it's only blockbuster AAA titles with cutting-edge production designs that prompt people to invest in faster graphics solutions, where NVIDIA has established an unbeatable lead.

NVIDIA is getting hawkish and wants itself a bigger slice of the sub-$200 market-segment targeting e-Sports players. The company launched the $139.99 GeForce GTX 1050 Ti and $109.99 GTX 1050 earlier this month. The two SKUs are based on NVIDIA's smallest implementation of its "Pascal" GPU architecture, the GP107 silicon. This tiny chip packs up to 768 CUDA cores, 48 TMUs, 32 ROPs, and a 128-bit GDDR5 memory interface, holding 4 GB of memory on the GTX 1050 Ti.

These are still "Pascal" CUDA cores that tick at 1.35-1.45 GHz. NVIDIA's decision to go with a 128-bit wide memory bus shows that the GTX 1050 Ti has been built to a cost (with no more than four memory chips), which prepares NVIDIA for a price war with better-endowed, but costlier to make AMD offerings. NVIDIA managed to get the power consumption of the GTX 1050 Ti below the 75W mark, which makes it capable of sustaining itself on slot power alone. Its nearest rival from AMD, the Radeon RX 470 4GB, needs an additional 6-pin PCIe power connector to feed its 120W TDP setup.



In this review, we are testing the Gigabyte GeForce GTX 1050 Ti G1 Gaming, a premium custom-design graphics card by Gigabyte that combines a factory-overclocked GTX 1050 Ti implementation with the company's signature dual-fan cooling solution, which turns its fans off when the GPU is idling, and a custom-design PCB that features an additional 6-pin PCIe power connector to help bolster the card's overclocking headroom.

GeForce GTX 1050 Ti Market Segment Analysis
 GeForce
GTX 950
Radeon
RX 460
GeForce
GTX 1050
GeForce
GTX 960
Radeon
R9 380
GeForce
GTX 1050 Ti
Gigabyte GTX 1050
Ti G1 Gaming
Radeon
RX 470
Radeon
R9 390
GeForce
GTX 970
Radeon
RX 480
GeForce GTX
1060 3 GB
Shader Units7688966401024179276876820482560166423041152
ROPs321632323232323264563248
Graphics ProcessorGM206BaffinGP107GM206TongaGP107GP107EllesmereHawaiiGM204EllesmereGP106
Transistors2940M3000M3300M2940Munknown3300M3300M5700M6200M5200M5700M4400M
Memory Size2 GB4 GB2 GB2 GB2 GB4 GB4 GB4 GB8 GB4 GB8 GB3 GB
Memory TypeGDDR5GDDR5GDDR5GDDR5GDDR5GDDR5GDDR5GDDR5GDDR5GDDR5GDDR5GDDR5
Memory Bus Width128 bit128 bit128 bit128 bit256 bit128 bit128 bit256 bit512 bit256 bit256 bit192 bit
Core Clock1024 MHz+1200 MHz1354 MHz+1127 MHz+970 MHz1290 MHz+1367 MHz+1206 MHz1000 MHz1051 MHz+1266 MHz1506 MHz+
Memory Clock1653 MHz1750 MHz1752 MHz1753 MHz1375 MHz1752 MHz1752 MHz1650 MHz1500 MHz1750 MHz2000 MHz2002 MHz
Price$120$120$110$175$175$140$170$170$290$235$250$210
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