Associate
- Joined
- 4 Sep 2011
- Posts
- 596
So, a mate of mine got in touch with me today gloating about how he's treated himself to a nice shiny new Benq XL2420T 3D Monitor and an MSI GTX 570.
My first reply, "Only has 1.2GB Vram I'd have gone with the 6970 or waited for Kepler to see real world performance."
Mate replies, "Since when did you come to the conclusion that I'd need a 6970 over the 570?"
Me, "Well, obviously the 6970 has more Vram and more headroom. Apparently that's the minimum".
Mate, "1.2GB is plenty and I'm gaming at 1080p. I can play on highest settings on BF3 and I haven't even got round to Skyrim yet but the way things are shaping up it's going to be great".
He went onto say something like, "As for Kepler, I didn't want to wait even if it's supposedly around the corner and at the end of the day the card is certainly no slouch and I think it's better than the 6970".
He finished by saying "Anyway, I'm off now to go put this card through it's paces, enjoy your 8800 GTX"
(cheeky bugger)
This was a rather interesting conversation as I hear (especially around here) that Vram is very important and the size of 2GB seems to be the magical number. That very same number pops up all too often and I think there was a case a while back where someone was advised to not go with the GTX 570 even though they were too, gaming at 1080p.
Now, I do occassionally pay attention to benchmarks and the odd review but I think I'm going to side more with my mate and he is a bigger gamer than me so I do value his opinion.
Not saying he's an expert but "real" world tests and scenarios are what interest me, not a link to some "proposed" specs when the cards are not even out yet.
It's early days but already he gives me the impression that a card with less than 2GB can more than handle resolutions at 1080p. Also, considering it's a TF III if he overclocks (which, knowing him he will) I imagine (correct me please if I'm mistaken) he will get better FPS too.
So, my fellow friends, the question is do you really need 2GB of Vram and would you seriosuly call it "future proofing" like is often advised?
I mean in my opinion how can one future proof or even use such a statement when there is always something newer and potentially faster and/or better around the corner?
My first reply, "Only has 1.2GB Vram I'd have gone with the 6970 or waited for Kepler to see real world performance."
Mate replies, "Since when did you come to the conclusion that I'd need a 6970 over the 570?"
Me, "Well, obviously the 6970 has more Vram and more headroom. Apparently that's the minimum".
Mate, "1.2GB is plenty and I'm gaming at 1080p. I can play on highest settings on BF3 and I haven't even got round to Skyrim yet but the way things are shaping up it's going to be great".
He went onto say something like, "As for Kepler, I didn't want to wait even if it's supposedly around the corner and at the end of the day the card is certainly no slouch and I think it's better than the 6970".
He finished by saying "Anyway, I'm off now to go put this card through it's paces, enjoy your 8800 GTX"

This was a rather interesting conversation as I hear (especially around here) that Vram is very important and the size of 2GB seems to be the magical number. That very same number pops up all too often and I think there was a case a while back where someone was advised to not go with the GTX 570 even though they were too, gaming at 1080p.
Now, I do occassionally pay attention to benchmarks and the odd review but I think I'm going to side more with my mate and he is a bigger gamer than me so I do value his opinion.
Not saying he's an expert but "real" world tests and scenarios are what interest me, not a link to some "proposed" specs when the cards are not even out yet.
It's early days but already he gives me the impression that a card with less than 2GB can more than handle resolutions at 1080p. Also, considering it's a TF III if he overclocks (which, knowing him he will) I imagine (correct me please if I'm mistaken) he will get better FPS too.
So, my fellow friends, the question is do you really need 2GB of Vram and would you seriosuly call it "future proofing" like is often advised?
I mean in my opinion how can one future proof or even use such a statement when there is always something newer and potentially faster and/or better around the corner?