The latest video card from nVidia - the GTX 1660Ti - is a very interesting beast.
It rocks the new Turing architecture but does away with the DLSS and Ray Tracing cores.
Nevertheless, the new GDDR6 memory and refined Turing CUDA cores combine to deliver extremely good performance when compared to the old GTX 1060.
Indeed the performance is in the GTX 1070/ 1070Ti-class, for considerably less outlay.
Here are the latest reviews of this surprising new product from tech writers all around the world: https://videocardz.com/80100/nvidia-geforce-gtx-1660-ti-review-roundup
There's no 'Founder's Edition' this time around from nVidia - only partner cards based on the nVidia TU116 core specification.
Huge variety (and a range of prices, from the base US$279 to over $320).
With its improved shaders and fast memory bandwidth, this card would run T:ANE and TRS19 extremely well at high visual quality settings and long draw distances at both 1080p and 1440p.
It rocks the new Turing architecture but does away with the DLSS and Ray Tracing cores.
Nevertheless, the new GDDR6 memory and refined Turing CUDA cores combine to deliver extremely good performance when compared to the old GTX 1060.
Indeed the performance is in the GTX 1070/ 1070Ti-class, for considerably less outlay.
Here are the latest reviews of this surprising new product from tech writers all around the world: https://videocardz.com/80100/nvidia-geforce-gtx-1660-ti-review-roundup
There's no 'Founder's Edition' this time around from nVidia - only partner cards based on the nVidia TU116 core specification.
Huge variety (and a range of prices, from the base US$279 to over $320).
With its improved shaders and fast memory bandwidth, this card would run T:ANE and TRS19 extremely well at high visual quality settings and long draw distances at both 1080p and 1440p.