The 4070 roughly matches the 3080 in almost every title. Outperforming in a single game doesn't mean all that much.The 4070 does better that the 3080 Ti at max settings in Indiana Jones, so?
The 4070 roughly matches the 3080 in almost every title. Outperforming in a single game doesn't mean all that much.The 4070 does better that the 3080 Ti at max settings in Indiana Jones, so?
Or I might actually remember how things were while people just lump everything into one event where all 10 series cards are launched on one day and at the minimum prices they've had over the span of 2+ years.I'm not usually a fan of consensus opinion forming but when literally everyone disagrees with you here you might just be wrong lol.
If you set some completely arbitrary goal based on names which mean nothing then Nvidia can do whatever they want.Can you imagine Nvidia releasing a 70 class card now that matches/beats the previous 80ti card? 4070 was roughly comparable to the 3080 and was $100 cheaper with 12GB of VRAM.
Can you imagine Nvidia releasing a 70 class card now that matches/beats the previous 80ti card? 4070 was roughly comparable to the 3080 and was $100 cheaper with 12GB of VRAM.
1080 launched at 600, 980 Ti 650, 1080 FE 700. So only FE 1080 had higher launch price than 980 Ti.
1070 FE launched at 450, not 500, "normal" 1070 launch msrp was 380, just like 970.
A little trip back to 2 months after launch:
You can now buy a video card built with a 314mm2 die packing 7.2B transistors
>70 class cardYeah why not? The 4070 Ti is more than a match for the 3090.
Nothing about the established Nvidia naming scheme is all that arbitrary, and when a $1500 5070 based on a 202 die releases then we can talk about that.If you set some completely arbitrary goal based on names which mean nothing then Nvidia can do whatever they want.
They can release a 5070 based on GB202, price it at $1500 and there you have it - "a 70 class card beating the previous flagman for $100 less".
I never said they launched all on one day lolwhere all 10 series cards are launched on one day
It beats it in RT, so it does better in "CyberPunk 2077" tooThe 4070 roughly matches the 3080 in almost every title. Outperforming in a single game doesn't mean all that much.
>70 class card
>cites a 70ti product
Nothing about the established Nvidia naming scheme is all that arbitrary, and when a $1500 5070 based on a 202 die releases then we can talk about that.
Right but those who tend to remember how great 1080Ti was seem to forget how that card actually launched and what was sitting on its price prior to that.I never said they launched all on one day lol
Did you even read my comment?Also lol about 1080Ti's price being affected by Vega 10/20 launch - with the former being hardly on par with 1080
The 4070ti was actually the 4080 12GB renamed after backlash. They were so far apart in performance they aren’t really in the same tier and the 4070ti also cost significantly more.Yes because a 4070 Ti is a 70 class card. Or did you mean "card with brand name ending in 70"?
So in three games. In every other game, they are simply on par.It beats it in RT, so it does better in "CyberPunk 2077" too
Also beats it in "Black Myth - Wukong".
The 4070ti was actually the 4080 12GB renamed after backlash. They were so far apart in performance they aren’t really in the same tier and the 4070ti also cost significantly more.
So you saySo in three games. In every other game, they are simply on par.
So you understand my point and you’re arguing semantics lol.If you want to make a point about perf/$ you should frame it in those terms. E.g. “the new $400 card used to bring the same performance as the old $700 card but I can’t imagine that happening again”.
Literally just look up averaged out benchmarks between the two cards and they’re equivalent with the 4079 struggling a bit more at 4k.So you say
So you understand my point and you’re arguing semantics lol.
Tier and pricing historically have been linked so I use it as a proxy.
The fact that you were able to restate my point but with prices instead of naming means you understand exactly what I’m talking about: you used to get a lot more uplift for less money compared to now. I recognize the reasons for this but it’s clear to everyone watching that value generation over generation has gone down in recent years.No you haven’t made your point because you haven’t defined what metrics you’re using besides “name”. So we have no idea what you’re actually comparing.
Edit: to illustrate the point further on why names in isolation aren't useful...
The 7800 XT is 18% faster than the 7700 XT but the 6800 XT is 45% faster than the 6700 XT.
The 7900 XT is 30% faster than the 7800 XT but the 6900 XT is 5% faster than the 6800 XT.