Nvidia GeForce GTX Titan X
Price (MRP): Rs. 85,099
Price (MRP): Rs. 85,099
If you want bragging rights, these flagship cards are the way to go. Thankfully, for those with lighter wallets and more down-to-earth expectations, there are usually second-tier cards that offer most of the same performance and functionality for significantly less money. This is where most people's interests lie, and with good reason.
Nvidia GeForce GTX 980 Ti and GeForce GTX Titan X Review: 4K Gaming and Beyond

If you want bragging rights, these flagship cards are the way to go. Thankfully, for those with lighter wallets and more down-to-earth expectations, there are usually second-tier cards that offer most of the same performance and functionality for significantly less money. This is where most people's interests lie, and with good reason.

Nvidia launched its GeForce GTX Titan X GPU earlier this year; the latest in its continuing Titan line which represents Nvidia's absolute premium offering at any given time. The Titan X is no exception, billed as the current world's fastest single-GPU graphics card. It's based on Nvidia's current Maxwell architecture, but in a new implementation codenamed GM200 which has more of everything going on than the GM204, aka the GeForce GTX 980.
Compared to GM204, GM200 has 50 percent more resources. There are six clusters of shader processing units rather than four, for 24 shader multiprocessors (3,072 individual shader units in total) rather than 12 and (2,048 shader units). That has a direct relationship to memory bandwidth which is also up to a 384-bit bus rather than 256-bit.

In an interesting turn of events, Nvidia no longer makes its Titan series cards suitable for accelerated parallel computing and intense number-crunching. Previous models supported double-precision floating-point operations, effectively making them low-priced Quadro cards for workstations, but the new Titan X is purely for gaming.

With both the GeForce GTX Titan X and GeForce GTX 980 on the market, Nvidia appeared to have things pretty much stitched up on the high end. Still, there was a considerable price and performance gap between the two. Nvidia could easily have released a toned-down GM200 card, which is what companies usually do in order to put chips that roll off the line with minor defects to good use. However, with no competition to force its hand, Nvidia was happy to let people pay more for the Titan X.
That changed when AMD released its new Radeon lineup, particularly the new Radeon R9 Fury series. Nvidia, predictably, had had the GeForce GTX 980 Ti ready and waiting.

This is the card many had been waiting for, and it shouldn't be hard to see why. No games today or those expected in the near future will suffer with a 6GB RAM ceiling, and the shader reduction is much less severe than it could have been. The silver cooler shroud is just as effective, and some might even prefer this look. Most importantly, though, with prices starting from Rs. 55,249, the value-for-money equation has shifted drastically.

The Maxwell architecture is fairly mature now - we first saw it in the entry-level GeForce GTX 750 and 750 Ti over a year ago. The most remarkable thing about Maxwell is that Nvidia has managed to cut power consumption drastically compared to its last generation of GPUs even without the benefit of a process shrink. Maxwell GPUs are fabricated on a 28nm process which should have been outdated by now, but has remained in service thanks to ongoing trouble manufacturing smaller transistors.
The impressive power efficiency also means that much less heat is generated, so cards can get by without loud, bulky coolers. Both the Titan X and GTX 980 Ti have 250W TDP ratings and you can get by with a 600W power supply (assuming your other components aren't too exotic). Nvidia is especially insistent on this message for the GTX 980 Ti, which it says provides 3X the raw performance and 2.3X relative performance per watt compared to the three-year-old GeForce GTX 680.

The tops of both cards have glowing green "GeForce GTX" logos which will look neat in a windowed case. You'll find the usual SLI "golden fingers" connectors towards the backplate, and a pair of PCIe power connectors - one six-pin and one eight-pin - towards the other end, pointing upwards. You shouldn't have a problem fitting these cards into enthusiast-class PC cases or wiring them up. Note that if you're stacking multiple cards for SLI, airflow will be restricted thanks to the blower design.

Both AMD and Nvidia have specific optimisations that only their cards support. Game developers must choose whether to expend resources adopting either or both camps' techniques, but when they do, there are notable improvements to complex materials such as smoke, fire, fog, hair, and shadows. Nvidia claims quality improvements in all of these areas -the kinds of things that improve gamplay experiences but don't show up when measuring frames per second.

The most interesting thing about these two cards is whether or not the GeForce GTX Titan X will perform better enough than the GeForce GTX 980 Ti to warrant its far higher price. From the looks of things, this shouldn't be the case, but we have a fairly wide selection of games and synthetic tests that should help us determine the truth.
We tested both cards under identical conditions using the following hardware:
- Intel Core i7-4770K CPU at stock speeds
- Asus Z97-Pro (Wi-Fi ac) motherboard
- 16GB of Adata 1600MHz RAM
- 120GB Kingston HyperX Fury SSD
- Cooler Master Hyper 212X CPU cooler
- Corsair RM650 power supply
- Asus PB279 4K monitor
Both cards were tested under Windows 8.1 Professional, 64-bit, with Nvidia's 353.06 driver.

The Unigine Valley simulation tops out at 1440, which is one step above HD 1080p and is a very reasonable target resolution for high-end gamers. The 980 Ti and Titan X managed averages of 54.5fps and 55.6fps respectively. The minimum and maximum scores were also within 2fps of each other. Valley challenged both cards enough to make them dip to 27 and 28fps respectively, showing no real qualitative difference between them.

On to the games, and we begin with GTA V, one of today's most demanding titles. It scales up beautifully no matter what hardware you throw at it, and can deliver some truly gorgeous visuals. We ran the exhaustively detailed internal benchmark at 4K 2160p with 16xAF, 4xMSAA, and pretty much every quality setting turned up to its maximum setting. The GeForce GTX 980 Ti and GeForce GTX Titan X averaged 32.75fps and 34.04fps respectively. Even a game this demanding did not suffer at all because of the less expensive card's 6GB RAM ceiling. You should be able to game comfortably at 4K and 60fps with less aggressive settings.

We tested at 4K with graphics quality set to Ultra, SMAA enabled and HBAO+. The GeForce GTX 980 Ti gave us 42fps on average with a 23.8ms average frame time, which increased to 30.3ms when considering the worst one percent of outliers. The GeForce GTX Titan X scored 40fps on average with frame times going from 25.2ms on average to 31.6ms for the worst one percent. The variance between the two cards is again negligible, with the dip in the Titan's numbers attributable to the variance in individual runs because we play through a set scene manually and things never go exactly the same each time.

We also ran through Crysis 3, which can still push modern hardware to its limits. At 4K, with quality set to very high, 8xMSAA and 16xAF, the game looked absolutely gorgeous. We recorded 17fps on average with the GeForce GTX 980 Ti and 21fps with the GeForce GTX Titan X at these settings. Frame times were 57.8ms and 48.5ms on average.

Verdict
At the end of our game runs, we are left with no compelling reasons to consider the Titan X over the 980 Ti at current prices. While it is no doubt a tiny bit more powerful, it isn't worth 50 percent more money. In our minds, the GeForce GTX 980 Ti is the far more sensible option for anyone unless they just really want to brag about having the best of everything, or they envision hitting the 6GB RAM limit with multiple monitors or some other such highly specialised use case.

For now, it's safe to say that anyone gaming at 4K would be well served by a GTX 980 Ti, and anyone who doesn't have more than a 1080p monitor would be wasting money as this card would be total overkill. Future-looking features such as DirectX 12 support reassure us that top-tier games should run at high settings for at least the next three years.
Nvidia GeForce GTX 980 Ti and GeForce GTX Titan X Review: 4K Gaming and Beyond

If you want bragging rights, these flagship cards are the way to go. Thankfully, for those with lighter wallets and more down-to-earth expectations, there are usually second-tier cards that offer most of the same performance and functionality for significantly less money. This is where most people's interests lie, and with good reason.

Nvidia launched its GeForce GTX Titan X GPU earlier this year; the latest in its continuing Titan line which represents Nvidia's absolute premium offering at any given time. The Titan X is no exception, billed as the current world's fastest single-GPU graphics card. It's based on Nvidia's current Maxwell architecture, but in a new implementation codenamed GM200 which has more of everything going on than the GM204, aka the GeForce GTX 980.
Compared to GM204, GM200 has 50 percent more resources. There are six clusters of shader processing units rather than four, for 24 shader multiprocessors (3,072 individual shader units in total) rather than 12 and (2,048 shader units). That has a direct relationship to memory bandwidth which is also up to a 384-bit bus rather than 256-bit.

In an interesting turn of events, Nvidia no longer makes its Titan series cards suitable for accelerated parallel computing and intense number-crunching. Previous models supported double-precision floating-point operations, effectively making them low-priced Quadro cards for workstations, but the new Titan X is purely for gaming.

With both the GeForce GTX Titan X and GeForce GTX 980 on the market, Nvidia appeared to have things pretty much stitched up on the high end. Still, there was a considerable price and performance gap between the two. Nvidia could easily have released a toned-down GM200 card, which is what companies usually do in order to put chips that roll off the line with minor defects to good use. However, with no competition to force its hand, Nvidia was happy to let people pay more for the Titan X.
That changed when AMD released its new Radeon lineup, particularly the new Radeon R9 Fury series. Nvidia, predictably, had had the GeForce GTX 980 Ti ready and waiting.

This is the card many had been waiting for, and it shouldn't be hard to see why. No games today or those expected in the near future will suffer with a 6GB RAM ceiling, and the shader reduction is much less severe than it could have been. The silver cooler shroud is just as effective, and some might even prefer this look. Most importantly, though, with prices starting from Rs. 55,249, the value-for-money equation has shifted drastically.

The Maxwell architecture is fairly mature now - we first saw it in the entry-level GeForce GTX 750 and 750 Ti over a year ago. The most remarkable thing about Maxwell is that Nvidia has managed to cut power consumption drastically compared to its last generation of GPUs even without the benefit of a process shrink. Maxwell GPUs are fabricated on a 28nm process which should have been outdated by now, but has remained in service thanks to ongoing trouble manufacturing smaller transistors.
The impressive power efficiency also means that much less heat is generated, so cards can get by without loud, bulky coolers. Both the Titan X and GTX 980 Ti have 250W TDP ratings and you can get by with a 600W power supply (assuming your other components aren't too exotic). Nvidia is especially insistent on this message for the GTX 980 Ti, which it says provides 3X the raw performance and 2.3X relative performance per watt compared to the three-year-old GeForce GTX 680.

The tops of both cards have glowing green "GeForce GTX" logos which will look neat in a windowed case. You'll find the usual SLI "golden fingers" connectors towards the backplate, and a pair of PCIe power connectors - one six-pin and one eight-pin - towards the other end, pointing upwards. You shouldn't have a problem fitting these cards into enthusiast-class PC cases or wiring them up. Note that if you're stacking multiple cards for SLI, airflow will be restricted thanks to the blower design.

Both AMD and Nvidia have specific optimisations that only their cards support. Game developers must choose whether to expend resources adopting either or both camps' techniques, but when they do, there are notable improvements to complex materials such as smoke, fire, fog, hair, and shadows. Nvidia claims quality improvements in all of these areas -the kinds of things that improve gamplay experiences but don't show up when measuring frames per second.

The most interesting thing about these two cards is whether or not the GeForce GTX Titan X will perform better enough than the GeForce GTX 980 Ti to warrant its far higher price. From the looks of things, this shouldn't be the case, but we have a fairly wide selection of games and synthetic tests that should help us determine the truth.
We tested both cards under identical conditions using the following hardware:
- Intel Core i7-4770K CPU at stock speeds
- Asus Z97-Pro (Wi-Fi ac) motherboard
- 16GB of Adata 1600MHz RAM
- 120GB Kingston HyperX Fury SSD
- Cooler Master Hyper 212X CPU cooler
- Corsair RM650 power supply
- Asus PB279 4K monitor
Both cards were tested under Windows 8.1 Professional, 64-bit, with Nvidia's 353.06 driver.

The Unigine Valley simulation tops out at 1440, which is one step above HD 1080p and is a very reasonable target resolution for high-end gamers. The 980 Ti and Titan X managed averages of 54.5fps and 55.6fps respectively. The minimum and maximum scores were also within 2fps of each other. Valley challenged both cards enough to make them dip to 27 and 28fps respectively, showing no real qualitative difference between them.

On to the games, and we begin with GTA V, one of today's most demanding titles. It scales up beautifully no matter what hardware you throw at it, and can deliver some truly gorgeous visuals. We ran the exhaustively detailed internal benchmark at 4K 2160p with 16xAF, 4xMSAA, and pretty much every quality setting turned up to its maximum setting. The GeForce GTX 980 Ti and GeForce GTX Titan X averaged 32.75fps and 34.04fps respectively. Even a game this demanding did not suffer at all because of the less expensive card's 6GB RAM ceiling. You should be able to game comfortably at 4K and 60fps with less aggressive settings.

We tested at 4K with graphics quality set to Ultra, SMAA enabled and HBAO+. The GeForce GTX 980 Ti gave us 42fps on average with a 23.8ms average frame time, which increased to 30.3ms when considering the worst one percent of outliers. The GeForce GTX Titan X scored 40fps on average with frame times going from 25.2ms on average to 31.6ms for the worst one percent. The variance between the two cards is again negligible, with the dip in the Titan's numbers attributable to the variance in individual runs because we play through a set scene manually and things never go exactly the same each time.

We also ran through Crysis 3, which can still push modern hardware to its limits. At 4K, with quality set to very high, 8xMSAA and 16xAF, the game looked absolutely gorgeous. We recorded 17fps on average with the GeForce GTX 980 Ti and 21fps with the GeForce GTX Titan X at these settings. Frame times were 57.8ms and 48.5ms on average.

Verdict
At the end of our game runs, we are left with no compelling reasons to consider the Titan X over the 980 Ti at current prices. While it is no doubt a tiny bit more powerful, it isn't worth 50 percent more money. In our minds, the GeForce GTX 980 Ti is the far more sensible option for anyone unless they just really want to brag about having the best of everything, or they envision hitting the 6GB RAM limit with multiple monitors or some other such highly specialised use case.

For now, it's safe to say that anyone gaming at 4K would be well served by a GTX 980 Ti, and anyone who doesn't have more than a 1080p monitor would be wasting money as this card would be total overkill. Future-looking features such as DirectX 12 support reassure us that top-tier games should run at high settings for at least the next three years.

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1 comments:
Write commentsThis post is really an informative because only a true games lover can understand the true value of Nvidia GeForce GTX 980 Ti. I just purchased a gaming laptop 1 week ago named Toshiba P50T-C-104. Till now it is working outstandingly and smoothly and I found it really a cheap gaming laptop at Laptop Outlet UK. If you know more liek it, then please share a post on it. :)
ReplyRegards
Jenny
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