The GTX 750 Ti is a graphics card designed for gamers who want to enjoy titles at 1080p on normal to high quality settings without breaking the bank. At its heart lies Nvidia's first-generation Maxwell GM107 GPU with 640 CUDA Cores, 40 TAUs, 16 ROPs and 1870 million transistors. The GTX 750 Ti ships with GPU Boost 2.0 technology which ensures that the card is always running at the highest clocks possible for the very best gaming performance under varied operating conditions.
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Yet we have a hard time recommending the GTX 750 Ti over the R7 265 as the Radeon offers 13% more performance (on average) and over 20% in games such as Battlefield 4. AMD's solution consumed 32% more power than Nvidia's, though in the games we tested during that scenario the R7 265 was also 24% faster...
Update: We've added pictures of the 750 Ti to show its diminutive size Nvidia and AMD have been waging a graphics war that's getting bloodier than ever, thanks to the release of Nvidia's 700-series and AMD's R7 and R9-series video cards. The green team's...
A quality little debut for Maxwell, offering decent performance incredibly efficiently, while also hinting at the future possibilities for the architecture.
Nvidia's GeForce GTX 750 Ti certainly won't set any pure performance records, but, sensibly equipped with a 2GB framebuffer, if you're after a mainstream graphics card that can play some of the latest games at a full-HD resolution allied to decent-quality settings, all with the minimum noise and power consumption, the first Maxwell-powered GPU makes a convincing case for your money.
Performance would have been more directly advantageous and we wouldn't have had to present many caveats between the comparisons. As it stands now NVIDIA's new mainstream baby is a great product that has a lot of advantages in power, noise and technology, but one that can't claim a dominant performance lead.
Either way, for a cheap and efficient means to play at 1080p with quality visuals, particularly in a small form factor build, the GTX 750 Ti hits the nail on the head. We're certainly excited to see what Maxwell can do when its higher end GPUs are unleashed.
Nvidia's 750 Ti also uses 55W less than the 115W R7 260X, making it nearly twice as power efficient than its AMD counterpart. If you're in the market for a $150 1080p-gaming GPU the 750 Ti should be at the top of your list.
From a pure price-performance perspective (try saying that fast), the GTX 750 Ti enters the market at a sensible position. At £115, it's faster than the R7 260X, which has recently dropped to £100, likely in anticipation of this launch. The distance...
Sporting Nvidia’s new architecture, Maxwell, the GTX 750 Ti emphasizes efficiency. The stock card needs no power-supply connector, and it’s less power-hungry than competing cards, making it excellent for upgrading low-end desktops....
Here it is, NVIDIA's GeForce GTX 750 Ti, one of the first GPUs based on its next-generation "Maxwell" GPU architecture. First reports of the chip being based on "Maxwell" hit us by surprise as we presumed that a new micro-architecture is invariably...
Reviewing cards further down the scale is always a task that draws your attention. As much as we adore looking at the monstrous graphics cards capable of tearing holes in the fabric of time, we're very aware that the majority of us are restricted by...