NVIDIA’s GeForce GTS 450: Pushing Fermi In To The Mainstream
by Ryan Smith on September 13, 2010 12:02 AM EST- Posted in
- NVIDIA
- Fermi
- GeForce GTS 450
- GF106
- GPUs
DIRT 2
Codemasters latest racing game marks the return of a racer to our benchmark suite. As the first DX11 racer, DIRT 2 makes pretty through use of the DX11’s tessellation abilities, not to mention being the best looking racer we have ever seen.
DIRT 2 is another game where the GTS 450 fits in comfortably between the 5750 and the 5770. And it performs well enough that even 1920x1200 with 4x anti-aliasing is an option, depending on how playable you find 40fps for a racing game. Overclocking is necessary to beat the 5770 however.
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just4U - Monday, September 13, 2010 - link
overclockers is the only review I've seen that shows the 250 in the mix and by the looks of it the 450 is a good 25-30% faster then the 250 on most games they tested with... what reviews are you reading?Personally I see no reason to rush out and buy two of these. A 460 is cheaper and to close in performance to justify it.
marraco - Tuesday, September 14, 2010 - link
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/geforce-gts-45...KG Bird - Monday, September 13, 2010 - link
Nice review, but answer one question for me. Why does the HD 5770 scale well in crossfire while others like the HD 5870 don't?heflys - Monday, September 13, 2010 - link
That's one of the great mysteries that has plagued the Crossfire setup. Might just be crappy drivers. Who knows.....Jedi2155 - Monday, September 13, 2010 - link
Do it right...and do it right the first time is the name of the game.OCNewbie - Monday, September 13, 2010 - link
Why would they compare a GTS 450 overclocked to a stock 5770? Wouldn't it make more sense to compare apples to apples, or in this case, OC'd versus OC'd? If you're gonna OC the GTS 450, then wouldn't it be reasonable to expect you'd also OC the 5770? Doesn't the 5770 OC quite well? This is probably even less of a debate, as far as which is the best performer, if you factor in OC'ng to BOTH cards.jabber - Tuesday, September 14, 2010 - link
Most 5770 cards go up to 900/1300 pretty easy.Would leave the 450 even further in the dust however.
Belard - Monday, September 13, 2010 - link
Looks like AMD still has a solid product line of DX11 parts. So an end-user would still be looking at the older 210~250 cards for the $40~80 market.AMD could still easily reduce their prices across the board... but guess they're going to wait until the 6000 series ships and them blow out the 5000 series for cheap.
If the 6750 comes out at $120, but good deal faster than the 5770, that is going to hurt.
KingKuei - Monday, September 13, 2010 - link
So what happened to the Release 260 drivers we were supposed to get this morning?Anand mentioned something about a bug in the driver related to OpenGL (or was it CUDA?) that they were going to fix before releasing it. Yet it's already late afternoon Monday and there's nothing on nVidia's site yet.
The big deal for me actually is related to SC2. SUPPOSEDLY, this is the driver release that fixes many of the issues related to framerate drops in SC2. I care more about that than the GTS 450!
Spazweasel - Tuesday, September 14, 2010 - link
One thing to note: there is a low-profile (double slot) version of this card already available from Palit. I can't find a low-profile 5770. For low-profile cases, this is therefore likely the best you can currently get, and given it's a low-thermal-impact part, this makes sense.The ball is in your court, Powercolor/Sparkle!