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Amidst all the hype and frustration surrounding the latest GPUs, let’s not forget that adjusting graphics settings is always an option.

Nick Evanson, Hardware writer

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(Image credit: Future)

This month I have been: endlessly testing stuff. It’s been a busy ol’ time either testing the performance of new games, the performance of new motherboards, or the performance of new CPUs. I’ve done so many benchmarks that I’m genuinely dreaming about them in my sleep. Help.

Let me start by saying that I have been fascinated by GPUs since the late 1990s, especially when I bought 3dfx Voodoo 2 12 MB cards to go with my Nvidia Riva TNT. Together, they made Quake 2 (and Quake 3 Arena), into lightning fast, gorgeous looking games. From there, I bought, sold, and tinkered with just about every GPU released by ATI (eventually AMD), Nvidia, and Matrox. I was obsessed with them; I couldn’t wait to get the next generation GPU and wring every ounce of speed from it.

Times have changed as I have changed, and these days, I only consider doing a GPU upgrade once every three to four years. I get a few here and there for testing purposes, but my main gaming rig will be running with its RTX 4080 Super until at least 2029. And thanks to all the different game performance articles I’ve been working on in recent times, it may last even longer than that.


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