Drop in your 580 will be good for 1080p and keep saving, then upgrade to maybe a 3060 or 3070 .
Ah but how do I pursuade my grandson to do the swap - he has borrowed my "spare" of for games. That has the 580 card in it ( an i5 board).
Drop in your 580 will be good for 1080p and keep saving, then upgrade to maybe a 3060 or 3070 .
No worries, @Mel_P - glad to read you had success with it.£36 0n the way (well in a few weeks...)! Need a 240GB SSD, as a backup, to clone my Gen 8 HP Microserver SSD which I have just upgraded to Windows 10 (from Win 7) - that's £28 gone. Thanks Plec
Over your RX 580(?) - irrelevant really, both would slaughter your present card at 1080p but the 3060's price would be more palatable. Depends on present/future screen plans - Hz/res? But since your post the 6000 release have muddied the waters - that and supply issues. I would take a beat, if you have the time, and wait a few months until supply isn't such a PITA.3060 or 3070 look a bit more than I want to pay - if web site "guessers" are right in their pricing? What performance boost could I expect? And how would I measure it?
I use 27" 1440p DELL Ultrasharps which are similar in response/Hz and i too prefer the 16:10 (1920x1200) format for work. Your Asus is fine for casual gaming and your RX 580 won't be limited by its refresh rate but if you ever get a 3000/6000 GPU then you may want to consider a 144Hz panel - there are quality IPS versions which would compliment your editing software.>snip<