Testseek.com have collected 602 expert reviews of the NVIDIA GeForce GTX 980 4GB GDDR5 PCIe and the average rating is 88%. Scroll down and see all reviews for NVIDIA GeForce GTX 980 4GB GDDR5 PCIe.
September 2014
(88%)
602 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
-
0 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
880100602
The editors liked
Consumes less power
Cheaper launch price
Significantly improved computational performance
Powerful enough for 1440p gaming at high quality settings
Looking at the specifications and test results of the GTX 980, my initial excitement for the new flagship card from NVIDIA seems to be well founded. This Maxwell GM204-based card uses the same 28nm manufacturing process found in previous generation Kepler...
The GeForce GTX 980 comes with 2048 CUDA cores and 4GB of GDDR5 memory, and it is based on new Maxwell GM204 GPU. The GeForce GTX 780 Ti comes with 2880 CUDA cores and 3GB of GDDR5 memory, and it is based on the Kepler GK110B GPU.Although their performanc...
It has been 16 months since NVIDIA released the GeForce GTX 680 and the Kepler microarchitecture and plenty has changed over the the past 1.5 years in the gaming industry. We are entering the era of 4K gaming and virtual reality gaming looks like it will ...
Amazingly low power consumption, Greatly improved efficiency, Faster than GTX 780 Ti, Quiet, Good overclocking potential, Reasonable pricing, 3x DisplayPort output with G-Sync Surround support, HDMI 2.0, 4 GB VRAM, Backplate included, New software feature
Performance increase over GTX 780 Ti not very big, High overclocking potential doesn't turn into that much real-life performance
NVIDIA's MSRP for the GeForce GTX 980 is $549. Amazingly low power consumption Greatly improved efficiency Faster than GTX 780 Ti Quiet Good overclocking potential Reasonable pricing 3x DisplayPort output with G-Sync Surround support HDMI 2.0 4 GB VRAM Ba...
If you had asked me to guess how the GTX 980 would perform just going off the basic specification listing I wouldn't have placed it up even near the top of our charts. With fewer CUDA Cores and a smaller memory controller I get the impression that Nvidi...
Published: 2014-09-19, Author: Chris , review by: slashgear.com
Chris Burns NVIDIA's Maxwell age of graphics processing begins with the NVIDIA GeForce GTX 980 and GTX 970 cards. What you'll see below is a brief look at the higher-powered of these two cards, tracking the performance of the NVIDIA-made reference...
Abstract: The Nvidia GTX 980 is here—as in, Nvidia has announced it, you'll be able to buy one soon, and it's also physically here in the PC Gamer offices...
Abstract: Ah yes, welcome to a reference series product review that a lot of you fine ladies and gentlemen have been waiting on for a long time. Would it be released, wouldn't it..? Delays at the manufacturing nodes in terms of fabrication process and die-shrinks; ...
Fastest single-chip card available, Runs cooler and quieter than comparable AMD cards, Requires much less power than comparable AMD cards
Requires two six-pin power connectors, 4K gaming on some games at maximum settings will still require multiple cards
Nvidia's high-end, Maxwell-based card delivers the best performance available from a single-chip gaming graphics card to date, while sipping much less power than the current competition. Just as nice: Its price is competitive with AMD's hotter Radeon R9 ...
When any GPU vendor releases a brand-new series that's more powerful, more power-efficient, and has more features, that alone shouldn't be enough to “wow” us – that's progression, and we've seen similar examples of it time and time again. But Maxwell is...