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- Thu, May 23
- Saints Row 4 trailer video series focuses on the completely randomness of Saints Row
- Ninja Theory, developers of DMC: Devil May Cry, tease "something new to show" for tomorrow
- Grand Theft Auto V Special and Collector's Editions announced by Rockstar, now available to pre-order
- Dead Island studio Techland announces new shooter 'Dying Light,' published by Warner Bros.
- Xbox One HUD image could be teasing half a dozen unannounced games
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The Palit 9800 GTX running in SLI continues to dominate the charts (as most would expect it to), though the results are not much different than the 9800 GX2. After a week or two, prices will start to settle, and a single 9800GX2 will probably end up costing around the same as a pair of 9800 GTX cards, making seem not really advantageous to choose the 9800GX2 over two 9800 GTX's -- but this may change. Meanwhile the Palit 9600 GT SLI seems to be offer the best price-to-performance ratio -- two of these overclocked Palit cards would sell for about 2/3rds of the price of a single 9800 GX2, but would be more expensive than a single 9800 GTX.
The 8800 GTS 512MB SLI setup continues to perform poorer than would be expected -- perhaps there are some driver issues slowing things down.


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I am an ATi fan, but I really hoped to see a card from nVidia that would let us play Crysis with maxed settings.
To me this 9800GTX has a poor value since a 8800 GTS 512 MB has "exactly" the same numbers in games...
You don't even have the guts to put it face to face with a 8800gtx, I think it says a lot!
Anyway I don't see the advantage of playing a game with 225fps instead of 145fps, there's no advantage at all.
For me nVidia with the 9xxx series is a little weak, a 8800gtx is still in the game for many time to come.