It's a pretty beefy card is the 1080, no doubt about it. As expected the hyped performance was (as always) more than the early benchmarks would suggest. That said, a real-world 20-40% improvement in general over a 980Ti is good (especially considering that's on a stock clock 1080). I think board partner offerings with overclocks will easily add another 15-20% to this... but at a price. My original comment still stands though... it doesn't offer enough over my 980Ti SC to justify spending another 700 quid at the moment. I'm going to wait (quite a while I feel) for the 1080Ti (or equivalent) which should be pretty special. And priced to suit 😧
Looking at the Pascal architecture it is quite similar to Maxwell. I think the biggest benefit for nVidia has been due to the move to 16nm FinFET.
It's interesting - what do you guys think of the benchmarks? Was it overhyped? It does mostly outdo 980's in SLI - mostly being the keyword.
Personally - yes I think the 1080 is excellent - BUT it may have just been over hyped a bit, especially in terms of 4K performance! (See benchmarks on YouTube to see what I mean...)
Opinions?
This why I still don't see 4K as a viable gaming resolution yet; even this card struggles unless you're prepared to forego some of the nice rendering effects, etc. It's a superb piece of hardware, but 4K is still not quite with us yet in my opinion.
I'm struggling to care in all honesty, maybe I've finally be doing this for too long? It certainly holds up well. The most impressive thing I saw was on the HardOCP review - where they pushed 2x SuperSampling through the 1080GTX whilst keeping SMAA on the 980Ti at 1440p, and it kept up a similar pace. That's pretty impressive. But for me personally, I just really don't feel the urge to go and spend £620 of my hard earned on it.
I have to agree - impressive yet... all a bit meh. I'd still buy one if I were looking to upgrade a 970/980 (non Ti) though.
It's all s**t. I find it amusing that it looks like they're trying to charge some kind of Enthusiast tax if you want to run conventional SLI past 2 cards - for which I'm sure they won't be supporting any better than they are now - which is woefully. Really struggling to stay interested.
I think this is a good thing as it's such a pain in the ass getting 2 (or more) cards to work nicely in SLI. nVidia's decision to effectively disregard multi-gpu setups of 2+ cards will likely annoy many but I think it's a good thing in general. It might mean better efforts for 2 card setups! Or, even better, it might mean better single card GPU solutions that do away with the need for multi-GPU setups! :tonguewink: