Courtesy of Evetech and AMD, we have over the past few weeks been inundated with graphics cards to review. Just this year we have already reviewed a Radeon HD 6870, Radeon HD 6950 , Radeon HD 6970, and our favourite so far, a Gainward Nvidia GTX 570 Phantom Edition.
Today we turn our attention to Nvidia’s current single GPU performance king, the GTX 580. The GTX 580 first appeared locally late last year, and began selling at just over R5,000 – a price point which it has yet to budge from. This is a massive amount of money to pay for a single component, but then Nvidia was quick to point out that the GTX 580 was the fastest single-GPU graphics card in the world at the time of launch.
The GTX 580 is, loosely speaking, an updated GTX 480. While the GTX 480 was a monster performer, it was slated for being extremely noisy, power-hungry, and for running very hot. Nvidia subsequently went back to the drawing board, and with the GTX 580 has been able to come out with a card that requires less power, runs cooler, and manages to increase the GTX 480’s shader processor count and clock speeds.
How do these tweaks effect the end-user experience when playing games with the GTX 580? The average gamer will look at a handful of core variables when considering a graphics card: price, performance, noise levels, temperature levels and features. These are what we will be paying close attention to in the following review.
Performance
As illustrated by the following benchmarks, the GTX 580 is simply the fastest single-GPU graphics card in the world. It easily beats AMD’s cheaper Radeon HD 6970 in most games, and it does so by a fair margin.
Benchmarks
All benchmarks were run on the same PC, with the only changing variable being the graphics card. CCleaner along with Driver Sweeper were used to make sure there were no left over files clogging up the registry. Each of the benchmarks were run three times to ensure consistent results. All benchmarks were run at 1920×1200, with all settings set as high as possible, including anti aliasing settings in order to push the cards to their respective limits. The scores in the graphs below indicate the average frames per second achieved in each benchmark.
Benchmark rig
AMD Phenom II [email protected], 8GB DDR3 1333MHz RAM, Gigabyte GA-MA790FXT-UD5P motherboard, Windows 7 64-bit
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Bad Company 2
We benchmarked the game’s intro engine driven cinematic footage to get a score here.
Bad Company 2 is still a very technically impressive game, and the GTX 580 did not disappoint, out-stripping the nearest competitor by around 20 frames per second, and thrashing AMD’s HD 6970 by almost 30 frames per second.
Batman: Arkham Asylum
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Dawn of War II: Chaos Rising
While delivering very playable frame rates, both Nvidia cards seemed to struggle with Chaos Rising a bit, struggling to break 55 frames per second. AMD cards performed slightly better across the board, although the frame rate difference was really negligible.
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Dirt 2
Whether or not you will be willing to part with this sort of cash for a single component will be up to you. It is the fastest card available for under R5,000, but with the R3,599 GTX 570 Phantom Edition nipping so closely at its heals in terms of performance, it is hard to recommend it.
While the GTX 580 is blisteringly fast and reasonably quiet, there are cheaper cards that will also be able to provide excellent frame rates at up to 1920×1200 with all settings maxed. The reality is that when you’re fragging noobs online in Bad Company 2, the difference between 65 frames per second and 90 frames per second is simply not noticeable, and therefore, paying over R1,000 extra for the priveladge may simply not be wise.
However, there is certainly value in a card like this if you’re running a high resolution monitor (1920×1200+), or even if you simply want to future proof yourself for the next 4 years of new games.
Pros
– Fastest graphics card for under R5000
– Fastest single GPU graphics card
– Not as noisy as the outgoing GTX 480
Cons
– Expensive, and whether or not the extra performance is justified is a debatable
– Still a bit louder than many would like
Score: 4/5