Product Reviews
Showing
1-20
of 23 results found
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Reviewed on June 24, 2008
AMD's new ATI Radeon HD 4850 is a solid midrange 3D card that will run pretty much anything, and it boasts some forward-looking features to boot. It might be worth waiting for the price to drop just a bit, at which point this card will become much more attractive.
TAGS:
ATI Radeon, Nvidia GeForce, NVidia, Diamond Multimedia Inc., ATI Technologies, Radeon, AMD, card, 3D
CNET review:
7.3
Very good
Check prices$210.99
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Reviewed on October 20, 2004
TAGS:
Nvidia GeForce, NVidia, 3D, Doom 3, card, ATI Radeon, games, ATI Technologies, motherboard, video card
Pricing not available
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Reviewed on August 2, 2007
If you're looking to build a home theater PC, we recommend ATI's Radeon HD 2600 XT as the midrange card to use, thanks to its nearly perfect HD video image and its no-fuss installation. But for 3D gaming, you'd be much better off looking for a good deal on a faster, older graphics card.
TAGS:
Radeon, ATI Radeon, ATI Technologies, Nvidia GeForce, NVidia, DirectX, card, generation, 3D, video card, games
CNET review:
7.0
Very good
Check prices$49.00
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Reviewed on September 28, 2006
We don't recommend paying even $125 for this new budget 3D card from ATI, but assuming you can find it for $100 or less, the Radeon X1650 Pro will meet your Windows Vista and basic gaming needs without overheating your PC or your wallet.
TAGS:
Radeon, ATI Radeon, ATI Technologies, Nvidia GeForce, card, NVidia, memory, Microsoft Windows Vista, games, Microsoft Windows
Check prices$161.80
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Reviewed on October 19, 2006
If you're looking for a gaming card to run Vista and play most games, ATI's Radeon X1950 Pro will get you there, but not perfectly, and its real-world pricing is higher than we'd like. We're more interested to see ATI's next-gen cards use the newly refined CrossFire dual-card technology, debuted here, but that will have to wait.
TAGS:
Radeon, ATI Technologies, card, ATI Radeon, Nvidia GeForce, power supply, NVidia, pricing, games, PC
CNET review:
7.0
Very good
Check prices$106.61
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Reviewed on October 5, 2005
It's not suited to 3D gaming, but for an upgrade to your video-oriented PC, ATI's new Radeon X1300 Pro introduces some useful features.
TAGS:
Radeon, ATI Technologies, 3D, card, Nvidia GeForce, ATI Radeon, NVidia, games, video
Pricing not available
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Reviewed on April 28, 2006
If you're looking for a single high-end 3D card, the Radeon X1900 XTX shows a lot of promise. If you have dreams of upgrading to a dual-card configuration, stay far, far away.
TAGS:
Half-Life 2, Radeon, Nvidia GeForce, ATI Technologies, ATI Radeon, NVidia, DirectX, resolution, card, games
CNET review:
7.0
Very good
Check prices$168.88
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Reviewed on August 23, 2006
ATI's Radeon X1950 XTX is the fastest single-chip 3D card that you can buy. Unfortunately, with Windows Vista and its accompanying gaming technology, it's going to become obsolete in just five months. ATI adjusted the price of the Radeon X1950 XTX accordingly, but at $450, it's still not an insignificant purchase. We recommend it only if money is no object.
TAGS:
Crysis, Radeon, ATI Technologies, DirectX, ATI Radeon, OpenGL, Nvidia GeForce, NVidia, 3D, clock speed, card, memory, games, Microsoft Windows Vista, Microsoft Windows
CNET review:
7.7
Very good
Pricing not available
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Reviewed on September 7, 2006
ATI's Radeon lineup features a confusing array of cards. The budget Radeon X1300 XT is a good card for the money, but we recommend the faster Radeon X1650 Pro because it costs only $10 more.
TAGS:
Radeon, ATI Radeon, clock speed, ATI Technologies, Half-Life 2, card, NVidia, Nvidia GeForce, 3D
Pricing not available
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Reviewed on April 15, 2005
ATI's Radeon X850 XT Platinum Edition is one of the fastest solutions out there that doesn't require to you to buy a pair of video cards.
TAGS:
ATI Technologies, Radeon, ATI Radeon, Half-Life 2, card, NVidia, DirectX, Nvidia GeForce, 3D, games, PC
CNET review:
8.0
Excellent
Pricing not available
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Reviewed on June 22, 2005
If you're looking for the fastest, most cutting-edge 3D card on the market, look no further. For now, Nvidia's GeForce 7800 GTX is it.
TAGS:
Nvidia GeForce, NVidia, overclocking, card, ATI Technologies, ATI Radeon, power supply, 3D, resolution, video card, PC
CNET review:
7.8
Very good
Pricing not available
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Reviewed on May 4, 2004
Unequivocally the most powerful graphics card on the market, ATI's Radeon X800 XT Platinum Edition hands Nvidia's new card a stunning defeat.
TAGS:
ATI Technologies, NVidia, ATI Radeon, card, high-performance, requirement, power supply, 3D, video card, Nvidia GeForce, CPU, PC
CNET review:
9.0
Spectacular
Pricing not available
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Reviewed on May 4, 2004
If you can live a few frames per second behind those with the highest-end graphics cards, the ATI Radeon X800 Pro saves you $100 and still smokes most of the competition.
TAGS:
ATI Radeon, ATI Technologies, Nvidia GeForce, Radeon, card, NVidia, setting, power supply, gamer, games, PC
CNET review:
8.5
Excellent
Pricing not available
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Reviewed on October 20, 2004
Overclocking gives the BFG GeForce 6800 GT OC a slight performance boost over comparably priced stock 6800 GT models, but you'll have to supply your own games.
TAGS:
Doom 3, Nvidia GeForce, card, ATI Technologies, video card, NVidia, ATI Radeon, power supply, resolution, games
CNET review:
8.2
Excellent
Pricing not available
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Reviewed on August 6, 2004
Thanks to Nvidia's second fastest graphics chip, the eVGA e-GeForce 6800 GT represents the current price-vs.-performance sweet spot for 3D gaming.
TAGS:
Unreal Tournament 2003, ATI Technologies, ATI Radeon, Unreal Tournament, Nvidia GeForce, DirectX, card, NVidia, 3D, Microsoft Corp.
CNET review:
8.0
Excellent
Pricing not available
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Reviewed on September 25, 2006
Featuring Nvidia's latest midrange GPU, the $200 PNY Verto GeForce 7900 GS offers a strong bang for the buck compared to its ATI rival. We recommend it if you are looking to play 3D games on an LCD monitor, aren't too concerned about sky-high frame rates, and won't be bothered if a next-gen replacement emerges in the coming months.
TAGS:
ATI Radeon, ATI Technologies, Radeon, Nvidia GeForce, NVidia, card, 3D, adapter, LCD
CNET review:
7.3
Very good
Pricing not available
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Reviewed on October 5, 2005
The 3D performance of ATI's Radeon X1600 XT is surprisingly weak, but its video features make it a sound upgrade to aid PC movie watching.
TAGS:
Radeon, Half-Life 2, ATI Technologies, Nvidia GeForce, NVidia, card, generation, 3D, ATI Radeon, video card, games, video, PC
Pricing not available
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Reviewed on October 20, 2004
ATI's new midrange Radeon X700 XT delivers fair performance, but neither it nor its Nvidia-based competition satisfies in newer games.
TAGS:
Doom 3, ATI Technologies, Radeon, Cisco Catalyst, ATI Radeon, NVidia, 3D, Nvidia GeForce, card, video card, setting
CNET review:
7.7
Very good
Pricing not available
-
Reviewed on October 5, 2005
ATI's second-best 3D card brings all of the requisite features to the 3D gaming table, but its specialized performance makes it less compelling.
TAGS:
Radeon, ATI Technologies, Doom 3, ATI Radeon, Half-Life 2, OpenGL, card, NVidia, Nvidia GeForce, power supply, motherboard, video card, games, PC
Check prices$69.19
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Reviewed on January 30, 2008
The 3D graphics card market changes too rapidly for us to get bullish about a card with premature driver software. The ATI Radeon HD 3870 X2 shows promise, even outscoring Nvidia on many PC games, but we would still wait until AMD works out the kinks before handing over your $450.
TAGS:
Call of Duty, Radeon, ATI Radeon, ATI Technologies, Nvidia GeForce, AMD, NVidia, DirectX, Unreal Tournament, games, card, video card, PC
CNET review:
7.3
Very good
Pricing not available
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