I’d rather buy an older high-end GPU than a newer low-end one, and VRAM is only part of why
The GPU market has been in flux for the better part of 2 years to this point, and buying advice has centered around what's in-stock instead of what's the best deal. When you're trying to ball on a budget, used hardware is always in the conversation. Used flagships can go for what new lower-end models are seen for in storefronts right now, and it's easy for PC enthusiasts to point at the VRAM discrepancy between the two and recommend the older card, but the comparison goes a lot deeper than that. There's certainly trade-offs when it comes to software features, but the flagships of a couple of generations ago have the chops to handle higher resolutions much better than their new low-end counter-parts, and I know which one I'm reaching for every time.
The GPU market has been in flux for the better part of 2 years to this point, and buying advice has centered around what’s in-stock instead of what’s the best deal. When you’re trying to ball on a budget, used hardware is always in the conversation. Used flagships can go for what new lower-end models are seen for in storefronts right now, and it’s easy for PC enthusiasts to point at the VRAM discrepancy between the two and recommend the older card, but the comparison goes a lot deeper than that. There’s certainly trade-offs when it comes to software features, but the flagships of a couple of generations ago have the chops to handle higher resolutions much better than their new low-end counter-parts, and I know which one I’m reaching for every time.
David Carpentier
France
France
Published by: aplhsindia.in
