Product Reviews
Showing
1-8
of 8 results found
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Reviewed on February 6, 2009
Even if it's a relative power hog, the Sapphire Radeon HD 4850 X2 brings so much speed and utility to the table it's hard for us to recommend another midrange 3D card. Only the particularly power conscious or those who play games with known multichip scaling issues should look elsewhere.
TAGS:
DirectX, Radeon, Nvidia GeForce, NVidia, card, PC
CNET review:
8.0
Excellent
Check prices$227.86-$249.25
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Reviewed on November 21, 2007
Despite the usual caveats of an ever-fluctuating 3D market, for the moment, at least, ATI's new Radeon HD 3850 graphics card delivers the best bang-for-the buck in PC graphics hardware. Until now we haven't had an acceptable sub-$200 option for PC gaming this year. Thanks to AMD, now we do.
TAGS:
Radeon, DirectX, ATI Technologies, card, Nvidia GeForce, video card, NVidia, motherboard, games, PC
CNET review:
8.0
Excellent
Pricing not available
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Reviewed on January 16, 2009
Nvidia's GeForce GTX 295 is the single fastest 3D card on the market, and for a relatively aggressive price. Added bonuses like power efficiency and PhysX support sweeten the deal, but even without those extra benefits, we'd still recommend this card for its processing power and comparative value.
TAGS:
power consumption, NVidia, Nvidia GeForce, graphics chip, Radeon, ATI Technologies, manufacturing, card, DirectX, gamer, PC
CNET review:
9.0
Spectacular
Pricing not available
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Reviewed on June 9, 2005
ATI's Radeon X300 SE will satisfy users looking for a good basic 2D video card, but spend a few more bucks if 3D is important to you.
TAGS:
ATI Radeon, ATI Technologies, Half-Life 2, 3D, Radeon, 2D, DirectX, card, PCI Express, resolution, effect, games, PCI, memory, video, PC
Check prices$129.00
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Reviewed on April 17, 2007
If you care more about HD movie watching than gaming and you need a new video card for the task today, we recommend a 3D card like this EVGA with Nvidia's newest mainstream graphics chip. Gamers can get more performance value from Nvidia's higher-end 8800 cards, but for anyone, it would be a good idea to wait to see what's new from ATI in just a few short weeks.
TAGS:
DirectX, Nvidia GeForce, graphics chip, card, Radeon, NVidia, ATI Technologies, power supply, gamer, games, 3D, video card, PC, Microsoft Windows Vista, video, Microsoft Windows
Pricing not available
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Reviewed on January 30, 2009
EVGA's GeForce GTX 9800+ Superclocked edition has basically the same price-performance benefit as its Radeon HD 4850-based graphics card competition. With identical bang-for-the-buck, you'll like this card if you demand power efficiency, but you should turn to ATI's card if your PC has limited upgrade room.
TAGS:
Far Cry 2, Crysis, Radeon, DirectX, Nvidia GeForce, resolution, card, NVidia, games, PC
CNET review:
7.3
Very good
Check prices$233.50
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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, Nvidia GeForce, DirectX, 3D, games, PC
CNET review:
8.0
Excellent
Pricing not available
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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, ATI Radeon, Radeon, ATI Technologies, Nvidia GeForce, AMD, NVidia, DirectX, Unreal Tournament, card, games, video card, PC
CNET review:
7.3
Very good
Pricing not available
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