
Originally Posted by
Vyk
The thing with expensive graphics cards however, are that you don't have to have the newest bleeding edge technology. The progress of technology these days means that you can get a card that was top of the line last year or the year before and still be good to go for a couple of years. I'm personally an ATI/AMD guy, but I won't deny that getting a good nVidia will get you a lot more options on the market, and you'll be able to play more taxing games like Crytek games and Unreal 4 and stuff, which may take more notice of the AMD market these days and games may be better optimized going forward, but it doesn't change the fact that they generally optimize it for nVidia first
But I'm a penny-pincher too. I went for a mid-grade comparable ATI for cheap and it's definitely gotten the job done over the years. I can't play anything on ultra high graphics, and I even tend to avoid going for high graphics, but it honestly hasn't failed to run anything I've thrown at it. I never have to run anything on low. And generally ENB and post processing makes up for any lack of graphical fidelity. So you definitely go with what you and your wallet is most comfortable with. I just wanted to lay out the pros and cons a little better