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Review: Nvidia's GTX 970 is the GPU Bargain of the Year


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high-end GPUs like Nvidia's new GTX 980 are all well and good, but not everyone wants to fork out $549 (£429) just to have the latest piece of graphics tech. Traditionally, the sweet spot for GPUs is somewhere in the middle, where the price/performance ratio is more sensibly balanced. Usually, that means taking a significant (if acceptable for the price) performance hit compared to the high-end cards, but something rather special has happened with the GTX 970.

Retailing at around $329 in the US, and £259 in the UK, the GTX 970 features the same GM204 chip as its bigger brother the GTX 980, but comes with less CUDA cores and slightly slower clock speed. However, because The 970 is based on the same power-efficient Maxwell architecture, it's a prime candidate for overclocking. With a stock TDP of just 145W (20W less than the GTX 980), there's a significant amount of headroom available for pushing the GPU--and the results are nothing short of spectacular for the price.

2666780-img_0574.jpg Zotac GTX 970 AMP! Omega Edition Specs

With such potential for overclocking, many Nvidia partners have taken to producing overclocked cards with significant bumps to power and cooling. Notably, while you can buy a cheaper stock version of the GTX 970 and still get a decent boost in performance out of it, these pre-overclocked GPUs don't command too much of price premium over their stock counterparts. The 970 I'm looking at, Zotac's GTX 970 AMP! Omega Edition, goes for £289 in the UK (US pricing TBC). For that price you get a beefy triple-slot cooler, along with two 8-pin power inputs for extra juice when overclocking, letting you boost it all the way to 171W.

GPU GTX 770 (Kepler) Zotac AMP GTX 970 (Maxwell) GTX 980 (Maxwell) CUDA Cores 1536 1664 2048 Base Clock 1046 MHz 1102 MHz 1126 MHz GPU Boost Clock 1085 MHz 1241 MHz

1216 MHz

Memory Clock 7000 MHz 7046 MHz 7000 MHz Memory Bandwidth 224 GB/sec 224 GB/sec 224 GB/sec Memory Bus Width 256-bit 256-bit 256-bit ROPs 32 64 64 TDP 230W 171W (up to) 165W Manufacturing Process 28-nm 28-nm 28-nm 2666785-img_0575.jpg

The Zotac 970 comes with a base clock of 1102 MHz, and a boost clock of 1241 MHz, a significant increase over the 1050 MHz and 1178 MHz of the stock card. Impressively, that boost clock is also slightly higher than the 1216 MHz of a stock GTX 980. With all that power and cooling on board, there's definitely room to overclock the Zotac 970 even more (with some reporting stable boost clocks of 1469MHz), but the benchmarks below are based on the out-of-the box experience. Elsewhere, there's the same 4GB of GDDR5 memory as the GTX 980, tied to a 256-bit bus. You also get all the other benefits of Nvidia's Maxwell architecture, including support for VXGI, DSR, and MFAA, which you can read more about in the GTX 980 review.

Benchmarks

But enough of the fluff: just how did the Zotac 970 perform? I tested it out using the same rig I used for the GTX 980, which featured an Intel Core i5-3570K processor overclocked to 4.2Ghz, an Intel Z77 DZ77GA-70K motherboard, 16GB of 1866 MHz Corsair Dominator GT RAM, a 120GB Corsair Force LS SSD, and a Corsair HX 850 PSU.

Unigine Heaven GPU Ultra @1080p, 8XAA FPS Ultra @1440p, 8XAA, Extreme Tessellation Ultra @4K, 8XAA, Extreme Tessellation R9 290X 55 34 17 GTX 980 61 37 20 GTX 970 53 31 17 GTX 780 Ti 55 35 21 GTX 780 49 31 18 GTX 680 34 21 4 Tomb Raider GPU Ultra @1080p, TressFX, FXAA FPS Ultra @1440p, TressFX, FXAA FPS Ultra @4K, TressFX, No AA R9 290X 74 52 27 GTX 980 77 53 28 GTX 970 73 49 25 GTX 780 Ti 74 49 27 GTX 780 60 42 22 GTX 680 49 32 - Metro: Last Light GPU Ultra @1080p, Tessellation Normal, 2XSSAA, Advanced PhysX Off FPS Ultra @1440p, Tessellation Normal, 2XSSAA, Advanced PhysX Off FPS Ultra @4K, Tessellation Normal, No AA, Advanced PhysX Off FPS R9 290X 72 44 39 GTX 980 74 47 43 GTX 970 72 43 38 GTX 780 Ti 77 47 41 GTX 780 64 38 35 GTX 680 48 27 - Battlefield 4 GPU Ultra @1080p, 2XMSAA, HBAO FPS Ultra @1440p, 2XMSAA, HBAO FPS Ultra @4K, No AA, HBAO FPS R9 290X 77 54 37 GTX 980 93 64 44 GTX 970 83 58 40 GTX 780 Ti 82 60 38 GTX 780 78 51 32 GTX 680 60 40 - Crysis 3 GPU Very High @1080p, 2XMSAA FPS Very High @1440p, 2XMSAA FPS Very High @4K, No AA FPS R9 290X 46 29 17 GTX 980 52 37 20 GTX 970 52 32 16 GTX 780 Ti 54 33 19 GTX 780 48 30 16 GTX 680 40 21 - Bioshock Infinite GPU Ultra @1080p, AO, AA FPS Ultra @1440p, AO, AA FPS Ultra @4K, AO, AA FPS R9 290X 120 86 46 GTX 980 140 90 52 GTX 970 134 92 48 GTX 780 Ti 134 92 49 GTX 780 110 73 39 GTX 680 92 60   Verdict

Ah, the march of progress. The GTX 780 Ti--which commanded a hefty $699 (£559) at launch and used a full 250W of power--is now, less than year later, largely matched by a £289 card that consumes up to just 171W of power. AMD's flagships--the R9 290 and R9 290X--are now essentially irrelevant. They're wildly inefficient, hot GPUs by comparison, and cost around the same price (more in the US), but are easily bested in the benchmarks by the 970. Even AMD's monster dual-gpu R9 295X2, previously the best value choice for 4K gaming, has its work cut out for it. Two 970s would be far cheaper, run cooler, use less power, and--based on the single-gpu benchmarks at least--run faster. Such a setup would only cost slightly more than a single 980 too.

 

2666799-img_0582.jpg

That's a very impressive result, and one that makes the substantially more expensive 980 that much less desirable. Of course, the 980 is more powerful, and if you want the absolute best in performance, it's still the GPU to get. It, too, is a similarly capable overclocker, which'll push its performance even further. But there's not as big a difference between the two as you might expect, and for those with a more modest budget, the 970 is, comparatively speaking, an absolute bargain. You get silky smooth 1080p at the highest settings, and excellent performance at 1440p.

 

Zotac's AMP! Omega version of the card is a great piece of kit too; under load, temperatures rarely crept above 70 degrees, giving you plenty of headroom for more overclocking, and at only a small bump in price over the stock 970. The only downside to the Zotac is its triple-slot cooler, which means you need a roomy case to fit one, or a pair of them, in. Regardless of whether you pick a stock card or a pre-overclocked one, though, Nvidia's GTX 970 is cool, quiet, and far more powerful than anything in its price range ought to be. Without a doubt, the GTX 970 is the GPU bargain of the year.

 

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  • 5 months later...

Looks promising...but out of budget for me i had a GTX 650 and have now a Radeon r7770. Unfortunately here in Brazil hardware is too expensive for most people

Great post  :)

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