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Reviews of NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560 Ti 1GB GDDR5 PCIe

Testseek.com have collected 180 expert reviews of the NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560 Ti 1GB GDDR5 PCIe and the average rating is 85%. Scroll down and see all reviews for NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560 Ti 1GB GDDR5 PCIe.
Award: Editor’s Choice January 2011
January 2011
 
(85%)
180 Reviews
Users
-
0 Reviews
85 0 100 180

The editors liked

  • Increased CUDA Cores
  • Quiet and Cool
  • PhysX
  • 3D Vision
  • Better power
  • Plenty of overclocking headroom for enthusiasts!
  • Outperforms Radeon HD 5870 and 6950 video card
  • Great performance for ultra highend games
  • Much lower power consumption vs GTX 470
  • Reduced heat output and cooling fan noise
  • Fan exhausts all heated air outside of case
  • Includes native HDMI audio/video output
  • Adds 32x CSAA postprocessing detail
  • Supports dualcard SLI functionality
  • Ad
  • Best performance in its class
  • Can compete successfully against Radeon HD 6950 2 GB in some tests
  • High performance with enabled tessellation
  • Wide range of supported FSAA modes
  • Minimal effect of FSAA on performance
  • Fullyfledged hardware HD video decoding
  • Highquality HD video postprocessing with scalability
  • Supports Nvidia’s exclusive PhysX and 3D Vision technologies
  • Wide range of
  • Competitive performance. Strong update to previous generation technologies. Relatively low power usage.
  • Strong Performance
  • Cool and Quiet
  • PhysX and CUDA Support
  • Competitive Pricing
  • Highly Overclockable (1GHz card coming)
  • Excellent performance
  • Great gaming experience on a mid range card
  • Fully DirectX 11 capable
  • Lower power usage
  • Excellent power per watt
  • Low Heat
  • Very good cooling system
  • Lots of overclocking potential
  • Great gaming performance for the price
  • Quiet operation
  • Supports 3D Vision
  • Physics/computation acceleration
  • Substantial performance improvement over GTX 460
  • Reasonable pricing
  • Quieter than other cards in this performance class
  • HDMI output
  • Support for DirectX 11
  • Support for CUDA / PhysX

The editors didn't like

  • None
  • Premiumpriced mainstream product
  • Palit GTX 460 Sonic Platinum 1GB GDDR5
  • No serious drawbacks discovered.
  • Requires 500-watt power supply. Blocks second expansion slot. Some versions of last-generation Nvidia cards are a better value.
  • Requires Two Cards For Surround View
  • Trailed The 1GB 6950 in most DX11 titles
  • Competitive pricing favors the competition
  • Blocks an adjacent slot
  • Requires two six-pin power connectors
  • Power draw limiter could complicate advanced overclocking
  • Still limited to two active display outputs per card
  • DirectX 11 relevance limited at this time

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Reviews

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  Published: 2011-01-25, review by: tomshardware.com

  • Until AMD’s Antilles-based Radeon HD 6990 launches, I’m personally not excited about high-end graphics. Radeon HD 5970s are back up to $600 dollars and more. That's a card that launched more than a year ago. Skip. GeForce GTX 580s cost $500. Unless you...

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  Published: 2011-01-25, review by: Bjorn3d.com

  • Palit GTX 460 Sonic Platinum 1GB GDDR5
  • In July 2010, NVIDIA released the GTX 460, which was able to provide high performance at a fairly low budget. The new GTX 560 is an optimized and completely redesigned version of GTX 460. After rigorous testing we were able to confirm the increase in...

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  Published: 2011-01-25, Author: Scott , review by: Techreport.com

  • As you've no doubt gathered, this is a ridiculously close contest between some formidable competitors. Sorting out which one is best isn't going to be easy, but I have a few definite thoughts on these matters. Let's begin by going to our price-performanc...

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  Published: 2011-01-25, review by: xbitlabs.com

  • Best performance in its class, Can compete successfully against Radeon HD 6950 2 GB in some tests, High performance with enabled tessellation, Wide range of supported FSAA modes, Minimal effect of FSAA on performance, Fullyfledged hardware HD video decoding, Highquality HD video postprocessing with scalability, Supports Nvidia’s exclusive PhysX and 3D Vision technologies, Wide range of
  • No serious drawbacks discovered.
  • The new GeForce GTX 560 Ti didn’t disappoint: it is a really worthy addition to the GeForce 500 family. Moreover, we can definitely call it a true “weapon of mass destruction”. And in fact, there is nothing surprising about it: while the recommended r...

 
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  Published: 2011-01-25, review by: pcper.com

  • The NVIDIA GTX 560 Ti marks not only the return of the Titanium suffix (and likely others are pending) to the GeForce line but also another entry into the wildly successful $249 price point. By averaging a 35% performance advantage over the current G...

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  Published: 2011-01-25, Author: Nathan , review by: legitreviews.com

  • Abstract:  he NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560 Ti is a great video card that destroys AMD's Radeon HD 6800 series, but AMD came out with a Radeon HD 6950 variant with 1GB of memory to head them off! It's a GPU war folks!

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  Published: 2011-01-25, review by: extremetech.com

  • Abstract:  Also like last generation's midrange cards, the GTX 560 Ti is only nine inches long, which means it will be able to fit in nearly every gaming case on the market; and has the usual requirements of two expansion slots (one PCI Express x16 to plug the c...

 
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(70%)
 
  Published: 2011-01-25, review by: pcmag.com

  • Competitive performance. Strong update to previous generation technologies. Relatively low power usage.
  • Requires 500-watt power supply. Blocks second expansion slot. Some versions of last-generation Nvidia cards are a better value.
  • With its GeForce GTX 560 Ti, Nvidia is trying to maintain its grip on the sub-$250 video card market, but it faces stiff competition from one of its own cards from the last generation. ...

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(70%)
 
  Published: 2011-01-25, review by: lanoc.org

  • I think Nvidia summed it up perfectly when they said the sweet spot just got a little sweeter. For those of you who are looking for the best performance money can buy, you should skip over the GTX 560 Ti, but if you have to save money wherever you can ...

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(90%)
 
  Published: 2011-01-25, review by: Bit-Tech.net

  • It’s hard not to be impressed by the GeForce GTX 560 Ti 1GB. It comes into what’s always been a very competitive spot in the market, and slots between the Radeon HD 6870 1GB and HD 6950 2GB on price. For the most part, it betters both across the range ...

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(100%)
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