Testseek.com have collected 256 expert reviews of the NVIDIA GeForce GTX 750 Ti 2GB GDDR5 PCle and the average rating is 82%. Scroll down and see all reviews for NVIDIA GeForce GTX 750 Ti 2GB GDDR5 PCle.
February 2014
(82%)
256 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
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0 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
820100256
The editors liked
Low power
Small form factor
Budget friendly
New Architecture offers more performance per watt
Powered solely though PCIE slot
Good for MidRange 1080p gaming
Small form factor makes it suitable for cramped cases for Living Rooms
The editors didn't like
No SLI but that wasn't there on the previous generation as well
The NVIDIA GeForce GTX 750 Ti is the very product that allows us to look at what NVIDIA has been working on with Maxwell. The general gaming performance of the GeForce GTX 750 Ti wasn't that exciting, but what NVIDIA has done with the power efficiency is ...
Sure its not a Titan or a GTX 780 Ti, or an R9 290X, but the GTX 750 Ti put up some impressive numbers in our testing. It's not going to be your first choice on your next high end build of course, but for a budget card it performed very well in game as w...
Abstract: Today we are taking the brand new GeForce GTX 750 Ti and putting it head to head with the recently released Radeon R7 265. As luck would have it both GPU’s are set to occupy the affordable $150 price bracket, so which deserves your money? Read on to fi...
Last week, AMD made two announcements. First, it was dropping the price of its Radeon R7 260X to $120, effective immediately. Second, it previewed the Radeon R7 265 at $150. Today, the 260X remains a mostly-$140 card. And the 265 isn't expected for a coup...
Published: 2014-02-18, Author: Steven , review by: techspot.com
Abstract: Marking the introduction of its Maxwell architecture, Nvidia has targeted AMD's $150 Radeon R7 265 with the new GeForce GTX 750 Ti, a card that promises to be more than another rebadge. The GTX 750 Ti's GM107 is meant to make Nvidia's 28nm design process ...
Abstract: This morning NVIDIA is unveiling their "Maxwell" family of graphics processors that succeed Kepler. With some past generations of NVIDIA hardware we have had to wait a while as Linux users to see how they would work and perform under non-Windows platforms...
New Maxwell architecture, No power-supply connector required on certain models, Compact design and low power requirements are great for budget-PC upgraders
Performance doesn't outpace similarly priced AMD alternatives, Overclocked cards will require six-pin power connector
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. ...
Great Power Characteristics, Good Performance, Nice Overclocking Headroom, Small, Cool, and Quiet
No SLI, Trails the GeForce GTX 650 Ti Boost
Where the GeForce GTX 750 and GTX 750 Ti really shined was in regard to power consumption. Despite offering competitive overall performance to their peers, the cards consumed far less power under load. The effort NVIDIA put into improving power consumptio...
Epic power consumption improvements; most power efficient GPU ever built, Quiet, Good overclocking potential, No power connector required, Low temperatures, Support for CUDA/PhysX
Relatively high price, NVIDIA power limiter restricts overclocking, Card could easily be single slot, No SLI support
According to NVIDIA, GTX 750 Ti will retail starting at $149. Epic power consumption improvements; most power efficient GPU ever built! Quiet Good overclocking potential No power connector required Low temperatures Support for CUDA/PhysX Relatively high p...
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 budge...