Wij
I am a FH squatter
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2003
- Messages
- 18,404
Which one and can you game on it?I just bought a new screen. I wanted to go for the wiiiiiide panel, but after some thought I cancelled and bought a 4K / Gsync panel. It's great tbh.
Which one and can you game on it?I just bought a new screen. I wanted to go for the wiiiiiide panel, but after some thought I cancelled and bought a 4K / Gsync panel. It's great tbh.
Investing in this thread.
if I run at 1080p (exactly a quarter of 4k) will it look OK with no interpolation? I don't see why not?
Does that make sense? I'm trying to future proof my panel choice, and I think a 4k panel might be the way to go longer term.
Which one and can you game on it?
I'd been wondering about this too G as I would like to get a higher res monitor than my current 1920x1200 Dell.
Havng done a bit of digging I found this which suggests that it should work fine.
RB
Some updated scores using Firestrike benchmark
Not really. You could buy the best part of 3 RX 480s for the cost of a GTX 1080. Also, the AMD card out-performs the R9-390X and will be about £50 cheaper. So, the performance very much does not match the price.The performance matches the price in general.
Probably more cost effective to run 2x480s crossfire?
Edit: as in, get you get you close to 1080 for less cash.
AMD have really pulled their finger out, driver-wise. They're much better with crossfire profiles now but there are some games that just plain won't support it (Doom for example).Only problem with Crossfire is compatibility, very few games actually support it and other games run like shit using it. I was going to buy 2x 480's but I've read around a lot over the last week about Crossfire and it's something I'm not willing to take a risk on. I'll probably go for a 1070 and overclock it, overclocks to 1080 stock speeds apparently.