The issue is what happens over the next few years. The Ultra texture settings of now become the very high or high in 12 to 24 months time and if you are already turning down settings now on a £330 to £400 card its not going to get any better and 2 to 4 years lifespan is not unreasonable for such a card.
Perhaps but £330 is the new normal i.e. well under half the cost of flagship cards and expecting such a card to last 4 years is quite optimistic. Turning down settings really isn't a problem, people have had to turn down settings on flagship cards before never mind mid-range cards, a setting is just a label. I have a 1070ti which is roughly comparable to a 2060 but with more VRAM, and I still turn down settings. VRAM isn't the limitation, it is more about having the raw power to deliver high framerates.
You mean like the 8800GT 256MB,which ended up failing so much within 12 to 24 months,that the slower 9600GT 512MB ended up being a better card??
People made those arguments back then,and sure it was an extreme example, but there has been a few instances even going back 16 years I can remember cards could be really limited by VRAM. For instance some of the special edition ATI 9800 series cards in prebuilt PCs which shipped with only half the VRAM of retail versions.
6GB vs 8GB is less extreme though, it isn't as if it has shipped with 4GB VRAM. Arguably with modern monitors at 144hz+ the balance shifts even more towards having GPU/CPU grunt as opposed to VRAM, although I will concede if people have 4k monitors it perhaps changes the equation somewhat.
I guess we are getting sidetracked into the old VRAM debate that has been done several times over the years but if you are talking about 8800GT vs 9600GT you need to bear in mind the 8800GT came out in 2006 and the 9600GT in 2008. So it's perhaps not all that surprising that it got superseded by something all that time later and in any case if you bought a 8800GT after two years you'd probably be considering an upgrade anyway because of technology moving on. In summer 2008 just a few months after the 9600GT came out you could pick up a GTX280 for well under £250, that was a card that totally annihilated the 8800GT/9600GT, I got one to replace a 8800GTS (I assume the GTX260 was even cheaper). So lets say you bought a 8800GT-256 and after 18 months or whatever you were sat there going 'gee this 256MB VRAM really sux', probably you were due an upgrade in any case with decent options on the market. If someone wanted a card to last for many years then perhaps it wasn't a great choice but in the noughties the idea of keeping a card for 4 years would have drawn derision in these parts.
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