I'm honestly amazed my upgrade to a 1070 Ti amidst the current RTX generation has yet to generate any buyer's remorse from myself.
I play at 3440x1440 and knew relatively early on that RTX would be unusable at the resolution, and the warning signs were there that DLSS wouldn't support ultrawide resolutions. Other than that, DLSS looked set to be the saving grace for the NVidia RTX line up.
I couldn't have imagined DLSS would be so poor and have such a restrictions even at 16:9 resolutions as what has transpired.
The 2060 might've been a real threat, but I see VRAM usage of 7 GB+, so that's ruled out.
As for the evidence I should've gone for a Vega 64 instead, well OC'd the 1070 Ti can equal or beat the Vega 64 in many circumstances, especially in NVidia favoured games. I also enjoy the ultra quiet and less power usage. It's like the 1070 Ti has sat in the eye of the storm and survived so far at 3440x1440, and it's picked up FreeSync compatibility in the meantime to boot.
I play at 3440x1440 and knew relatively early on that RTX would be unusable at the resolution, and the warning signs were there that DLSS wouldn't support ultrawide resolutions. Other than that, DLSS looked set to be the saving grace for the NVidia RTX line up.
I couldn't have imagined DLSS would be so poor and have such a restrictions even at 16:9 resolutions as what has transpired.
The 2060 might've been a real threat, but I see VRAM usage of 7 GB+, so that's ruled out.
As for the evidence I should've gone for a Vega 64 instead, well OC'd the 1070 Ti can equal or beat the Vega 64 in many circumstances, especially in NVidia favoured games. I also enjoy the ultra quiet and less power usage. It's like the 1070 Ti has sat in the eye of the storm and survived so far at 3440x1440, and it's picked up FreeSync compatibility in the meantime to boot.