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Nvidia GeForce GTX 670 review

Our Rating :
Price when reviewed : £303
inc VAT

A quick card with strong performance for its price - the GTX 670 is the best graphics card at the £300 mark

All the graphics cards we’ve seen from Nvidia this year have been very much aimed at the high end of the enthusiast market. The absurd £880 dual-GPU Nvidia GeForce GTX 690 sits at the very top, followed by the Nvidia GeForce GTX 680 for a mere £380 (the GTX 680 has dropped in price by around £50 since we reviewed it in March).

Nvidia GeForce GTX 670

Even the third card in the range comes in at a hefty £300. The GeForce GTX 670 is based on the same 28nm Kepler architecture as the GTX 680, with a slightly cut-down specification. There’s still 2GB of 1.5GHz GDDR5 memory, but the GPU now has 1,344 instead of 1,536 CUDA cores. The core speed is also slower, at 915MHz compared to 1.01GHz. Like all Kepler cards, the GPU can dynamically overclock when more power is required, but the GTX 670’s maximum rated boost is 980MHz rather than the GTX 680’s 1,058MHz. The card is 241mm long and Nvidia recommends a fairly modest 500W power supply with two six-pin PCI Express connectors, so you shouldn’t need a huge power supply upgrade.

The reduced power made some difference in our benchmarks. In Dirt 3 at 1,920×1,080 with 4x anti-aliasing and Ultra detail we saw 98.5fps from the GTX 670, down from the GTX 680’s 114fps. In Crysis 2 at 1,920×1,080 and Ultra detail, the GTX 670 managed 41.9fps rather than 49.6fps.

A card this powerful is also crying out to be used on more than one monitor, so we plugged in another couple of 1080p displays. The GTX 670 has two DVI as well as HDMI and DisplayPort outputs, so you have plenty of flexibility in your choice of monitors – you can use any combination of these ports for Nvidia’s triple-monitor Surround mode.

Nvidia GeForce GTX 670

The card was still powerful enough to run Dirt 3 on three monitors, even with triple-monitor Surround mode enabled for a resolution of 5,760×1,080 with 4x anti-aliasing and Ultra detail. At this resolution we saw 41.9fps, and the frame rate never dipped below a still-smooth 34.2fps. Like every card we’ve ever seen bar the ridiculous GTX 690, the GTX 670 struggled when running Crysis 2 on three monitors – we only saw 16.4fps at 5,760×1,080 in this most demanding of games.

The GTX 670’s performance in our game tests puts it in a sweet spot that few current graphics cards can touch. The rung above contains the AMD Radeon HD 7970 GHz Edition for £370 and the Nvidia GeForce GTX 680 for £380, both of which are around 15% faster than the GTX 670. Below it you have the AMD Radeon HD 7950 for £288, which is around 25% slower. Seen in this light, it’s a good value enthusiast card.

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Basic Specifications

Price £303
Rating *****
Details www.nvidia.com
Interface PCI Express x16
Crossfire/SLI SLI
Slots taken up 3
Brand nVidia
Graphics Processor Nvidia GeForce GTX 670
Memory 2GB GDDR5
Memory interface 256-bit
GPU clock speed 915MHz
Memory speed 1.50GHz
Card length 265mm

Features

Architecture 1,344 CUDA cores
Anti aliasing 16x
Anisotropic filtering 32x

Connectors

DVI outputs 2
VGA outputs 0
S-video output no
S-Video input no
Composite outputs no
Composite inputs no
Component outputs no
HDMI outputs 1
Power leads required 2x 6-pin PCI Express

Extras

Accessories none
Software included none

Buying Information

Warranty two years RTB
Price £303
Supplier http://www.amazon.co.uk
Details www.nvidia.com

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