NVIDIA Launches $349 GeForce RTX 2060, Will Support Other Adaptive Sync Monitors (hothardware.com)
MojoKid writes from a report via Hot Hardware: NVIDIA launched a new, more reasonably-priced GeForce RTX card today, dubbed the GeForce RTX 2060. The new midrange graphics card will list for $349 and pack all the same features as NVIDIA's higher-end GeForce RTX 2080 and 2070 series cards. The card is also somewhat shorter than other RTX 20-series cards at only 9.5" (including the case bracket), and its GPU has a few functional blocks disabled. Although it's packing a TU106 like the 2070, six Streaming Multiprocessors (SMs) have been disabled, along with 20% of its Tensor and RT cores. All told, the RTX 2060 has 1,920 active CUDA cores, with 240 Tensor cores, and 30 RT cores. Although the GeForce RTX 2060 seems like the next-gen cousin to the 1060, the RTX 2060 is significantly more powerful and more in line with the GeForce GTX 1070 Ti and GTX 1080 in terms of raw performance in the benchmarks. It can also play ray-tracing enabled games like Battlefield V with decent frame rates at 1080p with high image quality and max ray-tracing enabled. NVIDIA has also apparently decided to support open standards-based adaptive refresh rate monitor technology and will soon begin supporting even AMD FreeSync monitors in future driver update.
to get folks to upgrade. G-Sync monitors start around $400 so that's a tough sell. A 2060 can't quite do 4k at gamer framerates. It can do 1440 but that isn't enough of a bump to justify an upgrade. But 1080p/144fps with adaptive sync might be worth the money if you can get a decent monitor for $200. That's what they're up to.
:). And what's with folks buying used ones off ebay for $180+shipping. Another $20-$40 bucks and you can buy them new for that.
For my money I'll be happy when I can get a 1060 6gb for $200
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Since when do mid-range graphics cards cost more than a gaming console? Every mid-range graphics card I've bought has been $99 to $199. Low end cards $50+ and high-end graphics cards between $250 and $400.
But they’re still thinking the crypto makret is going to buy it. Ethererum dropped to less than $80 from its $1400 peak. It’s dead but Nvidia still has a whole field of tulips to sell.
As long as AMD has a hard time competing, NVIDIA can sell their stuff at a premium and introduce "midrange" cards at non-midrange prices.
Hopefully the next AMD generation will be a significant upgrade (especially at performance/watt where they are lagging the most).
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No one asking about Crysis seems that they have moved on or are looking for employment outside of Amazon.
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nVidia is charging about twice what this card is actually worth. Wait a while.
You are welcome on my lawn.
Given the tepid response to the 2070 and above, I'd say your analysis of the 2060 pricing is spot on. But hey, this is what you get when AMD is nowhere to be found in the marketplace. :-(
It's fine for mid range but it's the low end card. With a 2050/2050Ti being way worse if it happens.
So?
Any point? Except wasting time?
amd is in the marketplace..
anyhow. how well does this actually run battlefield v with the pseudotracing effects turned on?
world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
As someone that currently runs with 2 AMD cards I would not wish this fucking pain on anyone. Games that don't work or artefact and constantly require disabling Crossfire, The heat and power draw are insane. I hate Nvidia and will do just about anything to stick with AMD for graphics but fuck they make it hard.
I have 2 RX 480's with Asus Z170 pro gaming MB. regardless Crossfire is SHIT, when it works it gives a good bump in performance, but the drivers are complete ARSE and so many games misbehave with it that I actually usually run with crossfire disabled. I have suffered through SLI and Crossfire many times over the years, but this will definitely be the last and I would NEVER recommend anyone to go down this route.
nVidia is charging about twice what this card is actually worth. Wait a while.
Based on what? The card outperforms the 1070Ti which has an RRP $100 higher than that and the market has shown that it happily will pay the money for cards with that price / performance.
What is your basis for the $195 price mark?
Given the tepid response to the 2070 and above, I'd say your analysis of the 2060 pricing is spot on.
I wouldn't. The 2070 and the 2080 were underwhelming in performance and priced significantly higher than there lower down competition. I.e. RTX 2070 RRP was higher than the GTX 1080 and only performed marginally better.
By comparison the RTX 2060 is $100 cheaper than the GTX 1070 Ti and either equals or outperforms it. By all accounts this may be the only card that has hit the market at the right price point so far for its new release.
A lot of Slashdot comments here are saying the card is too expensive without justifying why. The RTX 2060 matches or significantly outperforms the GTX 1070 Ti depending on the load and is priced at about $100 lower RRP. This is quite the opposite to the ludicrous launch prices of the RTX 2070 and RTX 2080.
At the same time it's worth remembering that this is not a low end card and rumours are the non-RTX line will continue to develop with a cheaper GTX 1160 in the works to say nothing of the even cheaper cards NVIDIA has on the market.
Now with all that said and done, rumours also say that AMD is about to eat nvidia's lunch. AMD has confirmed that Navi won't raytrace but so far every rumour also says that it will double the price performance ratio of NVIDIA's cards, and my guess is when that happens we should actually have a justified reason to call all the NVIDIA cards overpriced including the RTX 2060.
Linear time.
And yet we have increased performance at a lower price point, Linear time shows it's just fine. Unless you subscribe to the theory of endless growth.
What do you think Moore's law is?
Oooh I know this one. The answer is "not relevant"! What do I win?
And if you think otherwise it would be a good idea to start looking into what has happened in technology development, performance, and dollars in the past 10 years, and then do your favorite activity: extrapolate. You may find you hit the $350 launch price.
The ass hat. Which you will likely put on your head, being as dumb as you are in thinking that 75% price increase in a single generation for the mid end product is something you can extrapolate from historic numbers.
Something that is obviously relevant and related to performance and cost, which is the observable reality for those not desperately astroturfing?
There was no 75% price increase. The RTX2060 has a 40% price decrease for similar performance, quite the same as the previous gen cards when rolled out. And while you keep using the term "mid-end" you continue to ignore the fact that just because there's a 60 in the number the product mix has changed and it is not a mid end card though it will be joined by a mid end card with a 60 after it sometime early this year.
If you're going to call someone dumb it pays to actually have a clue first.
You finished that sentence early for such a purportedly smart man. Do continue. What does doubling density of transistors lead to?