While we're still about a week and a half away from the upcoming NVIDIA GEFORCE GTX 660 officially launching, we got a chance to have a look at what kind of performance we can expect from the new ...
When running Just Cause 2's benchmark at 1920x1200, the GTX 660 was capable of 51fps, 9% slower than the GTX 660 Ti, 6% faster than the HD 7870 and 25% faster than the HD 7850. The GTX 660 averaged ...
We're a little later then we had hoped this time bringing you our look at the upcoming GEFORCE GTX 660. While we actually received our first retail sample about a week ago it wasn't till a week later ...
The GTX 660 rendered a comfortable 35fps in Crysis 2, allowing it to match the HD 7870 and beat the 7850 by a 13% margin. Moreover, it was just 5% slower than the GTX 660 Ti and 67% faster than the ...
After a few rumors about the Maxwell chipset and its release date in February, we now hear about statistics regarding the GeForce GTX 750 Ti suggesting that NVIDIA’s first Maxwell GPU is slower than ...
Nvidia's Kepler has neatly swept the game industry since the GTX 680 debuted this spring, and the company is ready to roll out a lower-priced variant. The GTX 660 Ti launches today, with most of the ...
The hiatus between new desktop GPU launches provides ample time - some say too much time - for manufacturers to tweak existing cards and offer a little extra to the customer. EVGA has turned its ...
The new GTX 660, as EVGA envisions it, represents a seductive upgrade for users of older graphics cards. Nvidia has been getting a lot of mileage out of the Kepler desktop GPU, using the chip in the ...
Page 2: EVGA and MSI GeForce GTX 660 Ti Cards Page 3: Gigabyte and Zotac GeForce GTX 660 Ti Cards Page 4: Test System and Unigine Heaven v3 Page 5: 3DMark 11 Performance Page 6: Lost Planet 2, Just ...
Nvidia has unveiled the GTX 660 and GTX 650, the latest in the chipmaker's line of Kepler-based graphics cards. The cards sport an MSRP of £179.99 ($229) and £89.00 ($199), and are available to order ...
NVIDIA is good at many different things, but where the company truly excels is in its ability to fill every conceivable void in the GPU market. Have $100? There’s a card for you. Have $150? Ditto.