Evo, na guru3d stranici pojavio se je review spomenute kartice (više njih). Pa evo link na review - KLIK
Kartica je skoro u svim testovima sporija od svog glavnog konkurenta ATI 5770 (a možda je rađena kao konkurent 5750?)! Ipak mislim da su ovi testovi pretjerani jer kupit ovu karticu i vrtit igre u FullHD rezoluciji sa max AA i AF nema nikakvog smisla. Za neku 1280x1024 ili 1440x.... ,mogla bi biti pun pogodak ovisno o cijeni, a i vjerovatno će novi driveri malo još popravit situaciju. Iako sada baš i ne djeluje dobro...
Testirane kartice:
* ASUS ENGTS450 DirectCu TOP
* ECS GTX 450 Black
* eVGA GTS 450 FTW
* Gigabyte GTS 450 OC
* Inno3D GTS 450 Freezer
* KFA2 GTS 450 LTD OC
* MSI N450GTS Cyclone
* NVIDIA GeForce GTS 450 reference
* Palit GTS 450 Sonic Platinum
* Sparkle Calibre X450G
Right then... after a total number of 326 benchmark runs for this article alone I think it's really time to start up the conclusion okay? When we started testing the baseline reference performing GTS 450 we couldn't help feeling that we expected something more spicy, I mean everybody surely agrees with me that we all expected a product to compete with the Radeon 5770.
NVIDIA themselves positions this card as competitor against the Radeon HD 5750, which 'currently while writing this article' is priced similarly to the GTS 450. Now at launch date, if you look in the stores you can find a Radeon HD 5770 for prices as low as 129 EUR and that's a bit of a problem for the GeForce GTS 450 cards alright. We feel that the card really offers decent value for what you are purchasing but just can't wrap our head around the fact that when you arrive nearly a year later than the competition to the market, with a lower segment mid-range product, that you insert a SKU that's having a pretty hard time beating your competition. While writing this article this is what was constantly puzzling us.
The AIB factory-overclocked products however save the day by adding another 10% maybe 15% extra performance, and hopefully these factory overclocked products will not be much more expensive, say ten bucks extra here and there. The pre-overclocked SKUs are the ones that will compete with ATI's Radeon HD 5750 cards quite well, and sometimes the Radeon HD 5770. But make no mistake, the Radeon HD 5770 overall is the better performing product and AMD already informed us that they will be lowering prices, equal to the GTS 450. With so much headroom in clock frequencies we would have liked to see NVIDIA give this product a little more bite with a higher reference baseclock frequency. Also we feel strongly that the choice of using a 128-bit instead of 256-bit bus on the memory was one limiting step too many.
Game performance wise up-to a monitor resolution of 1600x1200 we see good things, you'll have great image quality options and decent framerates, so that should be your target. If you, like most of our readers, play games at 1920x1200/1080 then we do recommend you look at the GeForce GTX 460, which offers a good chunk faster performance and well, it's the better card overall. Overclocking then, all cards can reach 900 MHz stable, period. Anything after that is dependant on luck, build quality (components/cooling) and overclocking software. After 925 MHz things get increasingly tricky and most cards really max out at 950 MHz. But coming from 783 MHz, that's a quite a lot of tweakability. And even overclocked temps on all boards remain very acceptable, as well as the noise levels.