I own this card and am really happy with it.Handled any game I've thrown at it. If you're looking for 4K Ultra-High settings gaming this is not for you, but if you're a casual gamer like myself then its a great little card. It's overclockable and not power-hungry.
Memory Amount - 2048MB
Memory Interface - 128bit
DRAM Type - GDDR5
Graphics Clock Base Clock : 1085MHz / Boost Clock : 1163MHz
Memory Clock - 2750MHz (DDR 5500MHz)
CUDA Cores - 640
Memory Bandwidth (GB/sec) - 88
NVIDIA 3D Vision Ready - Yes
NVIDIA FXAA Technology - Yes
NVIDIA TXAA Technology - Yes
SMX - Yes
Microsoft DirectX - 11.2
OpenGL - 4.4
Bus Support - PCI-E 3.0 x 16
Certified for Microsoft Windows 7 - Yes
Certified for Microsoft Windows 8 - Yes
Maximum Digital Resolution - 4096x2160
Maximum VGA Resolution - 2048x1536
Dual-Link DVI - Yes
VGA - Yes
HDCP -Yes
HDMI - mHDMI
Height 2 Slot
Board Length - 166mm
PCB Width - 145mm x 112mm
Graphics Card Power - 60 W
Minimum Recommended System Power - 400 W
Accessory - Manual, Driver Disc
Top comments
litwoojczyznomoj
23 Nov 158#2
I've played The Witcher 2 , Crysis2 on it and was pleased with the performance. Seen the videos ofWitcher 3 being played on it. Granted , not at the highest settings or fps but it doesnt bother me.
cannycoyote
23 Nov 154#4
totally agree, unless your mad about gaming and knocking up some pretty impressive weekly stats then this is perfect for the casual gamer. i own one and it plays bioshock infinite on ultra settings surprisingly well.
All comments (25)
Purps
23 Nov 152#1
So your game list is candy crush type games on max settings?
litwoojczyznomoj
23 Nov 158#2
I've played The Witcher 2 , Crysis2 on it and was pleased with the performance. Seen the videos ofWitcher 3 being played on it. Granted , not at the highest settings or fps but it doesnt bother me.
pedd
23 Nov 15#3
Looking to rebuild my desktop, I'd like it to be able to handle most games, but doesn't really have to be top settings. Would this do? Also, hoping to be able to stream games over Ethernet to other rooms (possibly using Steam Link), I believe that some graphics cards are better for that than others? In short, would this do me, or do I need to spend as much as a console to get that sort of functionality?
cannycoyote
23 Nov 154#4
totally agree, unless your mad about gaming and knocking up some pretty impressive weekly stats then this is perfect for the casual gamer. i own one and it plays bioshock infinite on ultra settings surprisingly well.
jan81
23 Nov 152#5
I'm pretty happy with my 750ti. Of course it's not as powerful as the top of the range cards but it's relatively cheap, uses very little power and will let you play modern games. Digital Foundry use a 750ti with an i3 in their budget PC and on multiplatform games it regularly matches or slightly exceeds the ps4 in their tests. As with everything it depends on your needs, but for 1080p great performance on games for last gen and reasonable performance on games built for the ps4 and Xbox1. Check out youtube for videos of it running a variety of games.
Firejack
23 Nov 15#6
Unfortunately its still not clear at the moment what the best graphics card solution for Steam In-Home Streaming is.
Currently the Steam client on Windows for NVIDIA graphics is using NVIFR or NVFBC (more commonly known to you and I as the capture methods for NVIDIA Shadowplay). However the Steam beta client has just added support for NVENC (the dedicated hardware video encoder) and reading the comments from the Steam developers ( http://steamcommunity.com/groups/homestream/discussions/0/485622866444927070/#c485622866445135612 ) it seems like NVENC is the goal they are currently working towards.
If NVENC makes it to the live client then yes, a GTX 750 Ti would be a good choice of graphics card in the host machine. Since its a Maxwell based GPU with the 2nd gen NVENC hardware encoder inside which is very capable of 1080p encoding.
livid_chimp
23 Nov 15#7
Second that - runs GTA V very respectably at 1080 - all settings h/vh expect textures. Averages 35-40 fps. Up to 60fps with Bioshock Infinite, 1080 all settings maxed out. Only running an AMD A8 too.
I've got the Gigabit low profile version - guess you can get a little more OC'ing from this with the larger fan.
JustExtreme to livid_chimp
23 Nov 15#11
You mean 1 gigabyte version? That will be why you can't run GTA V at Very High textures - with the 2GB version of this you should be fine to.
Opening post
Memory Amount - 2048MB
Memory Interface - 128bit
DRAM Type - GDDR5
Graphics Clock Base Clock : 1085MHz / Boost Clock : 1163MHz
Memory Clock - 2750MHz (DDR 5500MHz)
CUDA Cores - 640
Memory Bandwidth (GB/sec) - 88
NVIDIA 3D Vision Ready - Yes
NVIDIA PureVideo HD Technology - Yes
NVIDIA PhysX-ready - Yes
NVIDIA CUDA Technology - Yes
NVIDIA GPU Boost - 2.0
NVIDIA Adaptive Vertical Sync - Yes
NVIDIA FXAA Technology - Yes
NVIDIA TXAA Technology - Yes
SMX - Yes
Microsoft DirectX - 11.2
OpenGL - 4.4
Bus Support - PCI-E 3.0 x 16
Certified for Microsoft Windows 7 - Yes
Certified for Microsoft Windows 8 - Yes
Maximum Digital Resolution - 4096x2160
Maximum VGA Resolution - 2048x1536
Dual-Link DVI - Yes
VGA - Yes
HDCP -Yes
HDMI - mHDMI
Height 2 Slot
Board Length - 166mm
PCB Width - 145mm x 112mm
Graphics Card Power - 60 W
Minimum Recommended System Power - 400 W
Accessory - Manual, Driver Disc
Top comments
All comments (25)
Currently the Steam client on Windows for NVIDIA graphics is using NVIFR or NVFBC (more commonly known to you and I as the capture methods for NVIDIA Shadowplay). However the Steam beta client has just added support for NVENC (the dedicated hardware video encoder) and reading the comments from the Steam developers ( http://steamcommunity.com/groups/homestream/discussions/0/485622866444927070/#c485622866445135612 ) it seems like NVENC is the goal they are currently working towards.
If NVENC makes it to the live client then yes, a GTX 750 Ti would be a good choice of graphics card in the host machine. Since its a Maxwell based GPU with the 2nd gen NVENC hardware encoder inside which is very capable of 1080p encoding.
I've got the Gigabit low profile version - guess you can get a little more OC'ing from this with the larger fan.