My 1080ti lasted me until halfway through the 30 series, now I have a 3080 and I'm more then satisfied with it's performance. So just like I said no thanks to the 20 series. I will be doing the same for the 40 series. I hope we meet someday 5080 ti.
As someone who held out through all of this GPU madness with a GTX 980ti from 2015, I also see no need to upgrade now that I also have an RTX 3080 12GB. I don't want the troubles of becoming an early adopter of the new PSU and GPU combos as things have gotten prohibitively expensive for me in the last two years.
This guy talking about buying 4000 series while I'm still rocking 1070 feels bad man :( Don't get me wrong 1070 is a great card and it's been serving me well for those past years, i can still play most games on high settings 1080p 60fps which is enough, but sometimes i wish i had the money to buy the newest parts and play at max settings 4k 120fps ahhhhhhhhhhh maybe one day i hope.
Yeah, I'm still rocking here with the 2080 super when I made the upgrade from a 980 back into summer 2019. It's also great card, and it does enough for what I want. It's still frustrating that you can't find a new video card at a local best buy if something does goes wrong later with the video card you have. A few years before covid, you can actually walk into the store and just buy it without any worries. I'm skipping this gen and waiting on the 5000 series, but that will be a huge maybe for me because of NVIDIA's insane price point and the power wattage requirement. This guy does make a good interesting point about the power supply. Everybody is oozing over the new 4000 series lol but forgets about the hidden extra costs that goes along with it.
I would totally agree when you are talking sub 500 but over that I just don't forsee it mattering. Edit lol I am a huge electronics retailer so I have some basis to support this :p
My 1080ti lasted me until halfway through the 30 series, now I have a 3080 and I'm more then satisfied with it's performance. So just like I said no thanks to the 20 series. I will be doing the same for the 40 series. I hope we meet someday 5080 ti.
As someone who held out through all of this GPU madness with a GTX 980ti from 2015, I also see no need to upgrade now that I also have an RTX 3080 12GB. I don't want the troubles of becoming an early adopter of the new PSU and GPU combos as things have gotten prohibitively expensive for me in the last two years.
This guy talking about buying 4000 series while I'm still rocking 1070 feels bad man :(
Don't get me wrong 1070 is a great card and it's been serving me well for those past years, i can still play most games on high settings 1080p 60fps which is enough, but sometimes i wish i had the money to buy the newest parts and play at max settings 4k 120fps ahhhhhhhhhhh maybe one day i hope.
Yeah, I'm still rocking here with the 2080 super when I made the upgrade from a 980 back into summer 2019. It's also great card, and it does enough for what I want. It's still frustrating that you can't find a new video card at a local best buy if something does goes wrong later with the video card you have. A few years before covid, you can actually walk into the store and just buy it without any worries. I'm skipping this gen and waiting on the 5000 series, but that will be a huge maybe for me because of NVIDIA's insane price point and the power wattage requirement.
This guy does make a good interesting point about the power supply. Everybody is oozing over the new 4000 series lol but forgets about the hidden extra costs that goes along with it.
Actually have a video on the 1070 coming soon it’s still a great card
Am still using a 1030 3gb, stop complaining.
Evga stopped making gpus
This is true but the video was about nvidia
@@CablesTech the miniature is with an evga
No wonder my last motherboard had both pcie slots die. I guess it really was my 580.
Kinda a weird deal, I think it was the 580 and I think they fixed it with a bios update
Not what I was expecting but alright
People who can afford flagship cards outright could care less about the cost of the new ATX 3.0 standard prices.
Some of them I imagine that’ll be the case but I also imagine adding 30% to the cost of a card just to use it might be a bit deal to people
I would totally agree when you are talking sub 500 but over that I just don't forsee it mattering. Edit lol I am a huge electronics retailer so I have some basis to support this :p