Kuritaclan, on 03 February 2015 - 12:18 AM, said:
Check the introducing price of the 290 ($400) and compare it to the 970 what is the antagonist to it ($329). (For the 290X what was introduced with $549 it is not different to the 980.) Than i would mind your argument falls apart.
You can certainly choose to make that comparison, but I don't see how it's actually useful for determining anything. The 970 will never compete with a $400 290 or $550 290X. It competes with a $300 290X and $270 290, that's good non-reference 290s mind you. That's the market it's being put into as a product for consumer consideration... at a price of $330 (no, not counting the 970 and 290X with MiRs, even if $320 vs $290 makes AMD's case even more).
The 290X does a little worse at 1080P, sure, but that gap closes to about dead parity at 2560x1600, and by 4K the 970's shortcomings have boat anchored it slightly behind the 290X and have even placed it within striking distance of the 290 (it's about 4% behind and in front of the two AMD cards).
At this point, aside from a tiny amount of power efficiency, the reasons to consider the 970 have basically evaporated. Yes, you can concoct reasons why the 970 is supposedly "better" by comparing release prices, but arbitrary measures of better doesn't tell us which one consumers should actually buy in the here and now. At 1080P there's little reason to get a 970, and at resolutions down the road, or even resolutions a new rig is likely to pair either card up with today given how cheap 1440p/1600p monitors are, the kind of resolutions that even make a card like that worthwhile in the first place, there's now
no reason to get a 970.
The 970s good stock voltage overclocks might still be a consideration for some users who are big into OCing every GPU to its limits and don't mind playing the lottery. The 980 may still have its uses for the spare-no-expense crowd as well. I wouldn't pay twice as much for something for like 12% more performance, but at least that might be a noticeable jump for anyone willing to pay any cost for any tangible gain. For the most part, however, the 970s shortcomings have dragged it down.
We're also now left with the question of whether governments or markets should so permit Nvidia to blatantly lie about the specs of the card. As long as people focus on reviews, it's somewhat moot, but it does mean we have to keep more of an eye on Nvidia trying to pull fast ones with cards that do great at low resolutions, and choke higher up because they cut corners and didn't tell anyone.
Edited by Catamount, 05 February 2015 - 08:47 AM.