Nvidia GTX 980/970 3DMark Scores Leaked- from Videocardz.com

They're still happening, just more slowly. But 20nm got the greenlight for mass production recently. If Nvidia aren't using it for the supposed 900-line, it doesn't bode particularly well for when we'll see actual 20nm GPUs but in any case, if whatever die is used for the 980 is smaller than GK110 by a notable amount as one supposed leak showed, they could have done better. I don't deny that transistor-shrinking is slowing down significantly, but the issue I'm having right now is more of Nvidia's product margins. I think they're ridiculous. We're not strictly seeing the limitations of physics at play here, but rather how those limitations collide with and impact Nvidia's financial decisions in regards to die sizes and yields, product placement/segmentation, and/or MSRP.



No, I very deliberately used the term "980" for a specific reason. I know the real successor to the GK110 should be the GM200 just as the GK100 should have been the real successor to the GF110 instead of the GK104. The problem is Nvidia themselves are branding the mid-range-intended chip as the flagship and charging flagship money for it. That's my criticism; they're getting it wrong. I agree they're fundamentally different products in their intended design and physical targets, but if Nvidia are going to mash them all together as x80 parts anyway, I'm going to compare them anyway and of course, express my disappointment that a mid-range die is commanding a high-end price. I was intending to highlight how, with all previous architectural debuts, the big-die (for the transistor size, of course) chip was the new flagship whereas now they debut with a mid-range chip. At least with the 680, there was no transistor-shrinking excuse either aside from perhaps Nvidia's decision to stretch out Kepler to maintain a string of new products to tide them over a predicted 20nm drought.
Things have changed. the x80 cards are not true flagship models anymore. You're basing a lot of your judgement off of what it is ultimately just an arbitrary naming scheme that can be changed as they see fit.

And if the $500 rumor is true for the 980, then they are actually aren't charging flagship money for it if we go by the precedent of the Titan and 780Ti models.

I have no idea what's going in the financial world of these GPU makers, but is it possible that with the slowdown in progress, they are having to spend more and more money to try and achieve the gains that people desire or demand from them? And thus it becomes necessary to charge more for the products in order to justify their continued increased spending?
 
the issue I'm having right now is more of Nvidia's product margins. I think they're ridiculous. We're not strictly seeing the limitations of physics at play here, but rather how those limitations collide with and impact Nvidia's financial decisions in regards to die sizes and yields, product placement/segmentation, and/or MSRP.
Being a for-profit concern, Nvidia only charges what customers are willing to pay for them, and customers are pretty willing to give them their margins. Even you bought a 680. There are no arbitrary moral obligations for a GPU sales leader.
 
You have to check the fact that 99% of current game port will come from xbone and ps4,machine that can barely output 1080p 30fps without compromise, so there's nothing out there pushing anyone to do better. The only holy grail for pc gaming right now is 1440p, 4k and occulus rift. Other than that there's no incentive for the next 5-7 years
 
You have to check the fact that 99% of current game port will come from xbone and ps4,machine that can barely output 1080p 30fps without compromise, so there's nothing out there pushing anyone to do better. The only holy grail for pc gaming right now is 1440p, 4k and occulus rift. Other than that there's no incentive for the next 5-7 years

60fps and maximum PC settings will require high-end hardware, for good or bad reasons.
 
I will still carry on with my GTX580 until the 20nm is finally out.
I can play pretty much everything almost maxed, so I want the next upgrade to feel like a HUGE one.
 
Things have changed. the x80 cards are not true flagship models anymore. You're basing a lot of your judgement off of what it is ultimately just an arbitrary naming scheme that can be changed as they see fit.

And if the $500 rumor is true for the 980, then they are actually aren't charging flagship money for it if we go by the precedent of the Titan and 780Ti models.

I have no idea what's going in the financial world of these GPU makers, but is it possible that with the slowdown in progress, they are having to spend more and more money to try and achieve the gains that people desire or demand from them? And thus it becomes necessary to charge more for the products in order to justify their continued increased spending?

I think people are just spoiled by the times we get a genuine leap. The ATi 9700. The ATi 5870. The Nvidia Titan.

But I don't know that we're really seeing another on the horizon. It doesn't stop people hoping though.

Me, I'm going with the GTX980 when it launches. I just upgraded everything else in my system, so I going to wait a few weeks rather than going with the 780Ti... but this PC should be good for the rest of the console generation...

and I'm already happy with how games look on PS4 as a baseline... so I'm good, I think.
 
So, when can we realistically expect a GTX 960 to launch? Those are the cards that fit the best in my budget. Or will the launch of the 970/980 mean that another, older card will drop to this budget class?
 
Seems like a small upgrade from the 780ti. Keeping my 7970 till 20nm goodness. I can still play everything max settings with a good frame rate..
 
So, when can we realistically expect a GTX 960 to launch? Those are the cards that fit the best in my budget. Or will the launch of the 970/980 mean that another, older card will drop to this budget class?

960 is planned for October. Shouldn't be much of a leap over the 760 though.
 
I remember my GTX280 costing about 400 euro and my two 580's around 450, not sure if that was alot, also 850 for my Titan day 1 but i knew what i was getting into.
 
Argh... the price of these cards will make or break them for me.

If the Nvidia pricing scheme continues I really doubt I will buy one.
It will also just piss me off that it has come to this
 
Not really.

I remember dumping 600 into 8800GTX, which still sucked hard at Crysis.

At least 600 now will give you 1440p Crysis 3.

Using Crysis as an example for price performance comparisons is kinda disingenuous. That game represents an entirely different point in the history of PC gaming.
 
Sorry for the many quotes:
Consumers are into that stuff nowadays.

Every GPU war thread, fans will tout Nvidia's power efficiency and TDP.
TDP matters when you have it limit how powerful you can make a gpu
The thing is that new generations of gpus have ALWAYS had better performance/watt, and the problem is that they aren't making a new 250W card to replace the old 250W card, but instead just make a midrange one and price it at the high end.

Also 'gpu wars' 'fans'? ugh, please take that shit to gamefaqs or the console threads, thanks.


That's because Nvidia, AMD, and Intel are kind of hitting the limit in terms of raw power. They are hitting the point where all they can do is really reduce the amount of power required for a certain level of acceptable performance, and shrink the die to make it more affordable. At this point the only way they can go with CPU's is to up the core counts and hope software becomes more heavily threaded.

In the case of GPU's they are shrinking them and making them more cost effective so they can then up the number of SMX/Compute Units/Whatever you call it and end up with more raw power. If you remember Fermi it ran a bit hot and used a lot of energy because it was made on the wrong process node. Once they get designs to a certain point they will just expand outward, but nobody wants a card that requires 600W to run.

You're contradicting yourself, this new maxwell gpu only has a 170W TDP, the 780ti had almost 300W power consumption, they have a much more power efficient architecture but don't do anything with it on the high end...



It's not reasonable, not by historical trends, not by the logic of GPU architecture progression. The 780Ti itself was not reasonable, nor was the 780 before it, nor the Titan before it. The GTX 680, by historical trends, should have been the GK100/110 chip, not a measly GK104. The Titan should never have been $1000, nor the highly-crippled 780 $650. Nor should the 780Ti (read: the full real big Kepler die) have launched at $650 and quite some months late by the trends preceding it. A Maxwell (read: new architecture) part practically no faster than the full die chip of the preceding architecture should never be branded as an x80 part. Before the 680, it was unheard of. Perhaps the conditioning Nvidia so cleverly carried out with relative prices (680 managing to match up to the 7970 despite the mid-range chip, Titan making the 780 seem like a steal in comparison) makes you think the 980 is reasonable, but it's not. It's a disgrace. Here's how new architectures are supposed to be and have been for the longest time before the mess that's become the current microprocessor market.

6800 -> 7800 = ~50% improvement.

7800 -> 8800/9800 (new architecture) = ~200% improvement (and that justified the initial $650 pricetag on the 8800GTXs, not the crap Nvidia pulled with the GK110)

8800/9800 -> 280 (heavily improved Tesla architecture) = ~50-60% improvement

280 -> 480/580 (new architecture) = can't remember rough percentage improvements, but people were comparing 280 SLI to a single 480

The speculated GK110 -> 980 (new Maxwell architecture) jump is a joke in comparison, and no, the $500 pricetag isn't reasonable, it's what should been the reality for this level of performance for at least a year now following past card prices/releases.

The second revision of a given architectural lineup isn't supposed to be where the performance comes in (like the supposed "980Ti", that I really think will be a $800-$1000 Titan II, followed by a heavily crippled version of that for $600-$650 with the new naming scheme), it's supposed to be a revision. If these numbers are true for the 980, the 780Ti to 980 is more like 0-10% improvement (assuming some additional clocking headroom on the 980) and the overpriced-as-hell part we should have gotten in a more reasonable price range will be a huge jump rendering the 980 obsolete and charging a huge premium just to do so... just to progress in a somewhat reasonable manner as new architectures once did. Maybe it can be argued this is just a one-time stop-gap measure because of 20nm production issues or some-such, but I'm skeptical because of what Nvidia have been doing with Kepler and the Kepler architecture has overstayed it's welcome. We're at 2.5 years now. Time for a new architecture that actually means something, not just a new code-name for the continued overpriced drip-feeding Nvidia are intent on making the norm.

thank you!




Disappointment over technology progress (and prices to be more reasonable) VS understanding the technical reason behind why it isn't so aren't necessarily mutually exclusive..
And this, also to chalk it all up to lack of technolocigal progress alone is dead wrong.
Clearly nvidia seem to have a much improved architecture here, they could sell us a proper high end card on it but they won't until next year because fuck us (and no competition from amd)

Things have changed. the x80 cards are not true flagship models anymore. You're basing a lot of your judgement off of what it is ultimately just an arbitrary naming scheme that can be changed as they see fit.

And if the $500 rumor is true for the 980, then they are actually aren't charging flagship money for it if we go by the precedent of the Titan and 780Ti models.

I have no idea what's going in the financial world of these GPU makers, but is it possible that with the slowdown in progress, they are having to spend more and more money to try and achieve the gains that people desire or demand from them? And thus it becomes necessary to charge more for the products in order to justify their continued increased spending?

You're giving me a headache, 500dollars IS flagship money, hell it is pretty close to what used to be dual gpu money!
no it is not necessary for them to charge more money, they do so because they can (when kepler came out people were desperate to move on from 40nm 300W old 28nm gpus to more powerful 28nm due to all the delays and nvidia took advantage of them and made the 680 in its current form)
Gtx 580 was a 300watt, giant die with very very poor yields, it was sold at 500 euros and they still had massive margins on it despite the wide bus, large die and super low yields (120dollars production cost vs 500 dollars retail price)



Please people, at least aknowledge when you're getting fucked, instead of making up excuses for these companies.
They can make them up for themselves just fine...
Don't pretend Nvidia haven't doubled gpu prices over the past 3 years and don't pretend they aren't spreading out their releases within one architecture over a 2 year period just to keep doing that.

The staggered releases are what enables them to manipulate perception and keep these prices doubled.
Titan was the kepler geforce 580, yet they managed to give the perception that it was some kind of ubergpu...

Fact of the matter is they have a much improved architecture on a very mature 28nm process and they aren't passing on the savings and benifits to the people who buy their shit.

Pay what you want for these things but don't pretend they're doing you a favor, it's insulting.


edit: just to spell out some of the rationalisations and misconceptions:

-kepler released: it's a new process node it's more expensive as the process hasn't 'matured' yet : reality: gtx 580 on 40nm had super low yields anyhow and the 680 had a very small die no doubt making for good yields negating any difference.
Now the 28nm process is mature so going by the same excuse for why new cards on a new process node should be more expensive, they should by now be cheaper

-gtx 580 releases costs 500 euros, people rationalise paying 500 euros for it because of the large die, 384 bit bus (every time a gpu with a larger bus releases people go on about how the makes the pcb marginally more expensive and warrants a massive price premium)
gtx 680 releases , costs 500 euros, hey wait a minute 256bit bus (wow it must be so much cheaper to make right?) and a far smaller die, why are you paying 500 euros again? because it's called 680

-we can't have more powerful gpus because we are running into thermal limits, gpu makers are making bigger and bigger and hotter and hotter graphics cards so it doesn't follow moore's law
(this was the excuse for a 500dollar gtx 580)
Except, you know, 28nm was massively much more power efficient than 40nm fermi, we had everything we needed for a proper moore's law style jump in performance/price
And , you know, apparently maxwell is also massively much more power efficient than kepler, despite being on the same 28nm process (excuse used for the small performance increase), but we are fed another gtx 680....

All I see reasons for why prices go up, which are then promptly forgotten when they should make prices go down.

We're being sold midrange dies and midrange memory busses on a very mature process with a very efficient and much improved architecture at insane high end prices.
 
Probably gonna upgrade to the 980. I'm still using a 580, granted it's a pretty awesome 580. I was planning to build a whole new PC but my 2500k can probably hold out until next year unless it finally melts.

I've never bought a video card close to its launch, though. Asus cards have been good to me the last two upgrades so I might wait and see what kind of crazy factory OC card they put out this time.
 
I'm on the market for a new GPU and at this point I don't even waste my time with Nvidia anymore, their prices are terrible. This GTX980 will be unbelievably expensive.
 
And this, also to chalk it up to lack of technolocigal progress along is dead wrong. Clearly nvidia seem to have a much improved architecture here, they could sell us a proper high end card on it but they won't until next year because fuck us (and no competition from amd)
It's not like we have more insight into their operations or have enough chip design knowledge to know they if were holding back, or if they were actually facing design and process challenges. Until GAME24, what we got now is linear projection based on single 750Ti part and some good ol chiphell rumors.
 
You're giving me a headache, 500dollars IS flagship money, hell it is pretty close to what used to be dual gpu money!
'Used to be' being the key phrase there.

I'm not 'making excuses' for them, merely expressing that things do change and that while its very easy to just yell and scream "GREED!" anytime the price of something goes up, there are sometimes financial realities for the business to take into consideration that result in higher prices of things. I was a manager at a café and we would sometimes have to raise the prices of our coffee and food. It wasn't because the owner was just being greedy, it was because we were dealing with rising costs of our own that we couldn't control and if we didn't raise prices ourselves, it would have meant losing money. But of course the customers don't ever understand that. They don't give a rats butt about the reality of the sustainability of your business. They simply were used to a certain price and are unhappy that the prices went up and nothing else mattered to them.

Now maybe Nvidia *is* simply being greedy, but I'm just allowing for the possibility that maybe this slowing of progress means they cannot put out hugely more powerful products all the time and have to spend more and more money in order to make any progress at all.
 
'Used to be' being the key phrase there.

I'm not 'making excuses' for them, merely expressing that things do change and that while its very easy to just yell and scream "GREED!" anytime the price of something goes up, there are sometimes financial realities for the business to take into consideration that result in higher prices of things. I was a manager at a café and we would sometimes have to raise the prices of our coffee and food. It wasn't because the owner was just being greedy, it was because we were dealing with rising costs of our own that we couldn't control and if we didn't raise prices ourselves, it would have meant losing money. But of course the customers don't ever understand that. They don't give a rats butt about the reality of the sustainability of your business. They simply were used to a certain price and are unhappy that the prices went up and nothing else mattered to them.

Now maybe Nvidia *is* simply being greedy, but I'm just allowing for the possibility that maybe this slowing of progress means they cannot put out hugely more powerful products all the time and have to spend more and more money in order to make any progress at all.
You didn't read my post at all, so yeah nothing more to say, my answer to everything you just said is in it.

Maybe you're just too used to rationalising being fleeced as a customer, since you used to be on the console side of things:p (having to rationalise paying for multiplayer and paying 60 bucks for a game etc:p)
I kid , I kid
 
'Used to be' being the key phrase there.

I'm not 'making excuses' for them, merely expressing that things do change and that while its very easy to just yell and scream "GREED!" anytime the price of something goes up, there are sometimes financial realities for the business to take into consideration that result in higher prices of things. I was a manager at a café and we would sometimes have to raise the prices of our coffee and food. It wasn't because the owner was just being greedy, it was because we were dealing with rising costs of our own that we couldn't control and if we didn't raise prices ourselves, it would have meant losing money. But of course the customers don't ever understand that. They don't give a rats butt about the reality of the sustainability of your business. They simply were used to a certain price and are unhappy that the prices went up and nothing else mattered to them.

Now maybe Nvidia *is* simply being greedy, but I'm just allowing for the possibility that maybe this slowing of progress means they cannot put out hugely more powerful products all the time and have to spend more and more money in order to make any progress at all.

Pretty sure Nvidia is just abusing their market position (of course they are, does not make it any better in my eyes).

I would love to find the article, but when the 7970 launched Nvidia through Jen-Hsun Huang commented how they "expected quite a bit more from AMDs 7970."

Then the rest is history.

EDIT: FOUND THE ARTICLE
 
If the 980 is around 450 to 500 I'll pick one up. Gotta build a new PC since I'm giving my old one to my mom.
 
Pretty sure Nvidia is just abusing their market position (of course they are, does not make it any better in my eyes).

I would love to find the article, but when the 7970 launched Nvidia through Jen-Hsun Huang commented how they "expected quite a bit more from AMDs 7970."

Then the rest is history.
Yeah, nvidia aren't solely to blame for the position we are in.
Amd set the tone, they were first to market at 28nm (a massive jump from 40nm and people were eager to get out of 300+watt hell just to see some performance improvements)
They took full advantage of it with high prices for the 7900 series at launch while nvidias still had to compete with their old 40nm shit (no competition at all)

the 7970 was weak and amds gcn was a lot more power hungry than it should have been
Nvidia saw how eager consumers were to see some power efficiency gains after 3 years of 40nm awfulness and how shitty the 7970 was and decided that in this market and with this poor competition they didn't need their gk110.

Prices are what they are because nvidia can, not because they need to
and nvidia can because consumers are enabling them, white knighting for them and pretending they aren't fucking you with these prices is not helping anyone but nvidia...

I could understand people being willing to (be forced to) pay more temporarily with the 7970 launch just to rid themselves of those jet engine 6970s. It was a very unusual circumstance, being stuck on 40nm for nearly 3 years and there was no magical maxwell power efficiency gain on the same node back then either.
But as soon as nvidia entered the 28nm market with kepler things should have returned to normal...

I've said it before but nvidia and amd really have things figured out with these staggered releases, they get just the reaction out of their audience that they want

Nvidia could have crushed amd with kepler if they wanted to, they could have done it again with maxwell if they wanted to (amd have NOTHING, just their little tonka toy tonga 285 at the low end)
The fact that they aren't choosing to outcompete them and take all the market share but are content with sharing with amd because it lets them create the current situation should tell you how huge the margins must be.


Honestly what we really need is a third (and competitive) player in the gpu market, or a miracle that lets amd fully compete again.
This very onesided duopoly is really hurting the industry
 
You didn't read my post at all, so yeah nothing more to say, my answer to everything you just said is in it.

Maybe you're just too used to rationalising being fleeced as a customer, since you used to be on the console side of things:p (having to rationalise paying for multiplayer and paying 60 bucks for a game etc:p)
I kid , I kid
I did read your post, but without having any knowledge of the financial situation and costs involved for Nvidia, you're not really in a position to say we're *definitely* being fucked or not.

Like with the staggered releases, it might simply be their way of keeping products selling instead of just putting out the best they have all at once and then having *nothing* for the next two years. That also isn't necessarily 'greed', but possibly what they have to do to stop from having their sales plummet in the 2nd year of a product lineup's lifetime or risk getting beat by the competition in that 2nd year and having no way to respond.
 
That still doesn't excuse what Nvidia did with Kepler. Releasing the 680 as their top-end card just because they didn't need to do much to compete with the 7970 doesn't exactly help the consumer.

I know some people find this hard to understand, but manufacturers aren't in the business of giving customers what they feel they deserve, they're in the business of making the most money possible. Since AMD had no product which would drive them to do it, why the hell would Nvidia have pushed a massive, expensive, low yield chip on their mainstream high end cards when they had a smaller, more profitable chip to use instead? It would have made no business sense to do so, and no sane company in the world would have done it.
 
If the 980 is around 450 to 500 I'll pick one up. Gotta build a new PC since I'm giving my old one to my mom.

yeah, price is really important.

Looks like performance isn't going to get anyone with a 780ti to upgrade, and unlikely those with a 780 either.

Nivdia needs to look to the owners of the 670/80 or 760/770 to upgrade so it's doubtful that those people will be willing to upgrade for more than $500.
 
holy shit dat 980m, i bet the price is on par with its performance lol

still im gonna wait a little longer before upgrading to a new laptop (lack of cash one of the reasons too heh)
 
yeah, price is really important.

Looks like performance isn't going to get anyone with a 780ti to upgrade, and unlikely those with a 780 either.

Nivdia needs to look to the owners of the 670/80 or 760/770 to upgrade so it's doubtful that those people will be will to upgrade for more than $500.

Yup, I'm running a 4 year old 580 on a 1440p.
 
I did read your post, but without having any knowledge of the financial situation and costs involved for Nvidia, you're not really in a position to say we're *definitely* being fucked or not.

Like with the staggered releases, it might simply be their way of keeping products selling instead of just putting out the best they have all at once and then having *nothing* for the next two years. That also isn't necessarily 'greed', but possibly what they have to do to stop from having their sales plummet in the 2nd year of a product lineup's lifetime or risk getting beat by the competition in that 2nd year and having no way to respond.


Dude there is no way in hell a high yield small die combined with a small memory bus costs more than the low yield frankenstein gtx580 did (and people massively massively overestimated the cost of that die, that thing still had huge margins!)
Btw I know people's memory is short but the 580 series was already a first price hike in the gpu market, before it the 'high end 'had settled to 350-400 euros.

S mirage says it well, nvidia are doing it because they can, and because they are in it to make ALL the money, not a lot of the money, all the maximum money possible.

Which is obviously not a reason for us to dignify or welcome or accept the price increases,

Nvidia aren't your friend , they don't need our understanding or sympathy as a friend.
It is not up to us consumers to care about their profit margins, or to be happy for them when they manage to charge us more money for less.


Speak with your wallet, demand better and most of all have some dignity and don't do PR or damage control for the same corporation that is fleecing you.

Choose one:
would you like to hope for a 970 under 350 dollars?

or would you like to assume nvidia are your friends?

can't do both at the same time
 
Dude there is no way in hell a high yield small die combined with a small memory bus costs more than the low yield frankenstein gtx580 did (and people massively massively overestimated the cost of that die, that thing still had huge margins!)
Btw I know people's memory is short but the 580 series was already a first price hike in the gpu market, before it the 'high end 'had settled to 350-400 euros.

S mirage says it well, nvidia are doing it because they can, and because they are in it to make ALL the money, not a lot of the money, all the maximum money possible.

Which is obviously not a reason for us to dignify or welcome or accept the price increases,

Nvidia aren't your friend , they don't need our understanding or sympathy as a friend.
Well I know pretty much nothing about the costs involved here, so I cant really get into an argument about it.

It is not up to us consumers to care about their profit margins, or to be happy for them when they manage to charge us more money for less.
And I will always vehemently disagree with this. As I explained when I was a manager of a café, it was very frustrating having people complain to you about price increases, accusing you of being greedy or taking advantage of people when there's not a damn thing we could have done about it.

As a result, I have become very understanding that businesses need to be sustainable if we want them to continue to give us products and services we want.

And do realize that there is a difference between 'being understanding' and 'being happy'. I'm not happy about any of this, either. *IF* Nvidia truly are just being greedy and fucking us over for no good reason, then that sucks, but I dont really know that. Maybe the reality is in the middle somewhere. Either way, I still ultimately vote with my wallet and will buy what I feel is worth my money at any given time.

Choose one:
would you like to hope for a 970 under 350 dollars?

or would you like to assume nvidia are your friends?

can't do both at the same time
There's a difference between understanding that businesses have needs too and assuming they are your friend.
 
Would sell my 880m equipped laptop in an instant if the 980m is really that huge of a performance boost. That's nuts.

I can already play almost everything out there at 1080 with very decent settings but a 50% performance increase would let me max out most things at 60 which would be ideal.
 
Disappointing. I was looking forward to upgrading this year but looks like I can wait 'til the refresh.

I'm still using a 570.
 
680 sli still eating everything in terms of cost to performance ratio, and performance is only going to get better with DX12

We probably won't see a single GPU beat it out until Titan 2, and that'll easily be over a grand
 
I know it's a disappointing incremental upgrade in terms of the big picture, but I will be satisfied for a top 5 card (970) for $300-400 and will seriously consider the top single GPU for $500.

This is a good release for people in the mid 5xx and 6xx range of cards.
 
So hang on, is the 780ti practically on par with the 980 or something? I was thinking of getting a 980 but now I'm thinking I may as well just get the 780ti instead or even just wait another year. This would be coming off of a msi 580 lightning extreme 3gb model so I imagine the upgrade would be reasonable.
 
It doesnt need to on a technical level, it is just the Nvidia has yet to support a VR rendering mode.
I'm not sure how you'd add a VR rendering mode if no existing API supports it. I assume this will change with the likes of OpenGL NG, but that's still a while off.
 
I like what I'm seeing.
Especially the TDP.
I'm waiting to upgrade from my 7850 2GB.
I think the 980 will be mine by the end of the year.
It's either that or the R9 290.
 
I'm not sure how you'd add a VR rendering mode if no existing API supports it. I assume this will change with the likes of OpenGL NG, but that's still a while off.
If Nvidia can offer splitscreen render by default (it is in the driver: which adds no frame delay), do you really think an API is stopping them from just extending that mode to VR?

I ask only because Nvidia has added a number of different AFR modes over the years and I always assumed it was primarily on their end to make games work in SLI. As evidenced by the games which do not official support SLI but in which it can be forced.

Perhaps not though!
 
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