+ Is cheaper
They actually cost the same. $500 MSRP
+ Given Nvidia's dealings with the FX's, and subsequent attempts at covering up, I wouldn't trust any benchmark from them for a long time.
I didn't get any benchmarks from nVidia. They ones I am referring to were in an issue of PC Gamer. The benchmarks showed nVidia's card being faster than
ATI's by a few frames in new games, and by many frames in old games (Quake III), the one exception being that ATI did considerably better than nVidia's card
in Farcry at 1280*1024 55,52.
In fact, while I'm thinking about it, here are the benchmarks
(I'm typing them from the magazine)
nVidia GeForce 6800 Ultra:
3dMarks03(1024*768, trilinear filtering, no AA, 1 AF: 11,394
Aquamark3 (Default test run at 1024*768):
Score: 57,765
GFX: 8,724
Quake III (1280*1024):
All settings maxed, no AA: 368 fps
All settings maxed, 4x AA 8x AF: 330 fps
Unreal Tournament 2003 (1280*960):
Flyby results, all settings maxed: 222 fps
Splinter Cell (1280*1024):
All settings maxed: 65 fps
Halo (1280*1024):
All settings maxed: 69 fps
Far Cry (1280*1024):
Very High settings, water set to ultra high, no aa or af: 55 fps
Very High settings, water set to ultra high, 4x aa 8x af: 37 fps
ATI Radeon X800 XT P.E.:
3dMarks03(1024*768, trilinear filtering, no AA, 1 AF: 11,361
Aquamark3 (Default test run at 1024*768):
Score: 55,320
GFX: 7,854
Quake III (1280*1024):
All settings maxed, no AA: 351 fps
All settings maxed, 4x AA 8x AF: 291 fps
Unreal Tournament 2003 (1280*960):
Flyby results, all settings maxed: 222 fps
Splinter Cell (1280*1024):
All settings maxed: 63 fps
Halo (1280*1024):
All settings maxed: 63 fps
Far Cry (1280*1024):
Very High settings, water set to ultra high, no aa or af: 55 fps
Very High settings, water set to ultra high, 4x aa 8x af: 52 fps
It would seem that the nVidia card is the clear winner, albeit by a hair, in terms of performance. But the mysterious 21 percent framerate drop in FarCry has me concerned. Would this mean that games in the not so near future would cause nVidia's card to fall off the edge of the earth...?
The magazine goes on to talk about how ATI was the clear winner, which is weird. And from the commentary on the benchmarks, they definitely did not get the benchmarks backward.
What they were saying is that these cards are so powerful that the 3ghz p4 became the limiting factor. Using FX-51, ATI leaped ahead by 276 fps in Unreal Tournament 2003, while nVidia hit 261 fps.
As for what I want to do with it... well, windows gaming.
Normally I would go ahead and buy the ATI card, honestly, and I wouldn't be posting this. But then I remember how many of my graphics problems were solved merely by switching to an nVidia card.
the power supply problem for nVidia is no obstacle. If i'm going to spend $500 on a lasting video card than I might as well spend $30 - $50 on a 480 watt powersupply (something that monstrous is going to last, for sure)
It's a complicated question.