PRICE CUT!
RX 480 4GB variant will now cost 20,990rs and the 8GB will now cost 22,990rs.
RX 480 4GB variant will now cost 20,990rs and the 8GB will now cost 22,990rs.
1060 effect. Even then, 1060 looks like a good bet.
WHAAA! the unimaginable has happened! distributors reducing prices! amazing! (...and yes, i did just flip my wig!)PRICE CUT!
RX 480 4GB variant will now cost 20,990rs and the 8GB will now cost 22,990rs.
1060 effect. Even then, 1060 looks like a good bet.
Yup.. 1060 gives 10-15% more performance than the 480..
That maybe so but now the RX 480 still gives a good value on the money and that is exactly what AMD had always aimed for and has now possibly achieved. Before this the GTX 1060 owned them hard in both pricing and performance. And many AMD fans were also forced to go the GTX 1060 way. But as they say being late is better than never. Also remember that the RX480 was launched before the GTX 1060. And at least now we have options and AMD fans can rejoice.Yup.. 1060 gives 10-15% more performance than the 480..
It had to be that or death!Lol! Really? That big of a correction ?
Someone said this long back in this threadmy 2 cents -
1st cent - Matching with 970 isnt enough for the current Indian price, but the power consumption beats it - Since my rig covers for all the power requirement, it doesnt matter.
2nd cent - Release of 1060 will kick in AMD price cut competition.they always do it.
No. You got it wrong. The RX 480 CFX lags behind in a multitude of games. And also dual GPU do not scale well due to poor developer support. Thus RX 480 is not a viable option.This makes even the GTX 1070 and 1080 obsolete for those who are comfortable with investing in Crossfire setups.
One can buy 2x 480s for the same price as a single 1070 and get performance equal to or greater than a 1080.
as of now this is correct, however, rumors indicate that the rx 490 could possibly be a dual-gpu solution i.e. 2 480's on a single pcb.No. You got it wrong. The RX 480 CFX lags behind in a multitude of games. And also dual GPU do not scale well due to poor developer support. Thus RX 480 is not a viable option.
I also believe in upgrading my GPU once in 3 years.. I'm still running a GTX660 at the moment..but that's just me as i don't play enough to warrant an annual upgrade of the gpu. i look at it over a 3 year ownership period.
That maybe so but now the RX 480 still gives a good value on the money and that is exactly what AMD had always aimed for and has now possibly achieved. Before this the GTX 1060 owned them hard in both pricing and performance. And many AMD fans were also forced to go the GTX 1060 way. But as they say being late is better than never. Also remember that the RX480 was launched before the GTX 1060. And at least now we have options and AMD fans can rejoice.
Game changer.
This makes even the GTX 1070 and 1080 obsolete for those who are comfortable with investing in Crossfire setups.
One can buy 2x 480s for the same price as a single 1070 and get performance equal to or greater than a 1080.
as of now this is correct, however, rumors indicate that the rx 490 could possibly be a dual-gpu solution i.e. 2 480's on a single pcb.
if that's the case then perhaps amd has something up it's sleeve to counter the downsides of xfire.
pure speculation of course but just thought i'd throw that out there.
Don't forget the "Ti" variants which are likely to come after AMD releases their other cards.as of now this is correct, however, rumors indicate that the rx 490 could possibly be a dual-gpu solution i.e. 2 480's on a single pcb.
if that's the case then perhaps amd has something up it's sleeve to counter the downsides of xfire.
pure speculation of course but just thought i'd throw that out there.