Arthur_Tuxedo wrote:They were very close in all but one game, so close I would call it a tie. Because there is almost always some improvement in drivers from pre-release to post-release, I'd say that it will end up a performance tie overall.
Even if it ends in a tie, it will still be a win for Nvidia which went to market first and which offers SLI support.
It seems like a large delay to people who follow video card news, but a few months is not a big deal overall.
Nvidia is ahead by several months, and that's ASSUMING that ATI can rapidly get their cards into the marketplace--by no means a certain thing. All this to offer no discernable advantages over Nvidia's flagship card.
And people don't really care about that anyway. They care about money now vs. performance now. The delay meant that NVIDIA sold some 7800's to potential X1800 customers, but that's all.
Since the point of creating a new card is to sell them this is an entirely ridiculous argument.
As for SLI, I don't think most gamers care about that. Only a negligable percentage of buyers are willing to spend an extra $400-500 to get 8x FSAA instead of 4X, and people interested the option to upgrade later will be turned away by the need to get an expensive SLI motherboard. They will also know that by the time they should want to upgrade, ATI's Crossfire will probably be ready.
Nonetheless, it is an advantage that Nvidia's cards clearly offer over ATI's. The X1800 offers no advantages over the 7800. Period. End of story. The 7800's SLI support is an advantage, even if you don't think it's very significant, and most users who wish to purchase cards in this range are looking at very high-end systems and are looing for advantages. Crossfire is not looking like an attractive option, as has been mentioned already in this thread, and so ATI is basically coming late to a party and completely unprepared.
1. Can ATI match NVIDIA's high quantities?
2. Can ATI match NVIDIA's low prices?
3. Can ATI beat NVIDIA to market in the ~$200 segment, and is their mid-range offering a big improvement on the 6600 GT?
I don't think ATI is going to come out ahead this round, but I wouldn't ring the bell for NVIDIA just yet, either.
Nor have I. The advantage, though, is NVIDIA's right now at the high-end side of the market. The X1800, despite coming out months later (and potentially not even then), offers no discernable advantages over the 7800 and is weaker in ways that matter to the people who are buying them. This is not to say that ATI is dead in the water, but to point out that they have definitively lost in the high-end spectrum for this generation.
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