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Most important parts of reviews to you?

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With recent GPU releases i've been noticing a pattern in myself to jump to certain parts of each review rather than reading any of them from start to finish.

1. Benchmarks
Metro @ 1080p, the list of games tends to be nothing that I play (even Metro) but that seems to be the most fair for comparison overall.
2. Overclocking
General impression of how much headroom the card has and how they did it with ever increasing complexity of GPU clock controls.
3. Conclusion
See what they gave it overall and any major points they brought up in other sections of the review which I skipped.


How does everyone else tackle launch day reviews?
Just the top 3-5 points of interest please.
 
Various games BF3, Metro etc.
Though Temps, Noise, OC is what I usually look at the most, since when looking at the review you already know what performance you should roughly expect, for me it all comes down to the heat and noise the card produces and how much headroom it still has to pull off some decent OC.
 
Ignoring when [H] says a game is unplayable at certain settings when I use those same settings or higher and it's more than playable...

Example:
Moving down to 1080p opens up new possibilities for the R9 290X. We found that at 1920x1080 we were able to play with TressFX enabled and also have 2X SSAA enabled. This gave us an improved experience at 1080p which the Radeon HD 7970 GHz Edition could not do, it wasn't able to have 2X SSAA turned on. Both the TITAN and GTX 780 also allowed TressFX and 2X SSAA at 1080p.

Cough*bullxxxx*Cough
 
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i cant get why so many reviewers forget basics

a gpu what is it mainly used for 90 percent gamers ! yet many bench at stupid res or dont even use relevant games !

so res for eg

1680,1920,1440p

games

bf4,skyrim,grid 2,wow,black op2 , stuff thats relevant

minimums,max, and avg fps !

microstutter

heat/power useage.

size of card / noise

oc headroom with the standard cooler min and max .

also on win 7 and win 8 comparision
 
For me its the synthetic result, reason being its a level playing field as games will vary every time, as can 3Dmark, but not by so much, as we dont know for sure what part of the game they benched, take all reviews with a pinch of salt, my take so far on the 290X is its a good card and a good price point, but is it the right card for you? only you can decide, its not for me in its reference design as i have spent a lot on my rig to make its a silent as i can, but if i was water cooled then i would, but then that offsets the price, and brings it in the price range of the 780, which are decent at cooling no matter what one you buy in comparison to the 290X, i think this will be what will make the buy choose one over the other, i have decided to get two 280X toxics, time will tell if that was the right decision or not :) now bring on BF4
 
Heatsink design (size, number of fans etc), noise, temp etc.

Obviously performance is important but I'm happy to trade a few frames for a more silent, worry free experience.

My current card is an EVGA 680 and it's great, peaks at about 80C under heavy load and is barely audible, kicks all of the heat out of the back so it doesn't increase CPU temps.
 
Pretty much all I want to know when comparing 2 (or more) cards is what percentage of the time was spent under 60fps and under 30fps anything else is pretty much irrelevant - a one off min of say 9fps is meaningless if the other card never dropped below say 15fps but spent a far larger time at 15fps. Sadly most reviewers don't bother with this.

Like OP I generally jump to whatever benchmark I consider the best overall representative test, then skip to overclocking and the conclusion and maybe re-read the rest a bit later.
 
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