How good is the GeForce2 32Mb graphics card? Is this generally accepted as a decent card? I play Quake on occasion but don't consider myself a hardcore gamer. I just want to know what others think about this. Can the card be upgraded in the new iMac?
Comments
<strong>How good is the GeForce2 32Mb graphics card? Is this generally accepted as a decent card? I play Quake on occasion but don't consider myself a hardcore gamer. I just want to know what others think about this. Can the card be upgraded in the new iMac?</strong><hr></blockquote>
The card can't be upgraded, so it will have to be good enough. It is actually a GeForce2 MX, which is a scaled down version of the regular GeForce 2. It's considered a fairly low end card nowadays. With that said, my home PC has an old GeForce256 card with 32MB SDR RAM, and it works fine for me, even in 3D games. It's no GeForce 3 obviously, but I have yet to find a game that's not playable on it. I'd say its a decent but not stellar choice for the iMac line.
[ 01-10-2002: Message edited by: PCMan ]</p>
32MB of dedicated Double Data Rate (DDR) video memory.
Let me repeat "322MB of dedicated Double Data Rate (DDR) video memory"! That is better than the what is standard on the powermac G4.
This is being overlooked by most people. This iMac is going to rock!
It will run the overwhelming majority of 3D games very well. As a casual gamer, you'll have no complaints.
It is shit-load better than the 3D card in the older iMac that's for damn sure.
The next 12 months should be very interesting for the mac world.
Youll notice in the following <a href="http://www4.tomshardware.com/graphic/01q4/011218/geforce-ti-23.html"; target="_blank">benchmark</a> that even the MX400 (is apple even using 400s?) is about 1/3 the speed of a GF3 and about half that of a GF2.
Mind you this is on windows, but I dont think that thered be that great of a comparative difference.
[ 01-14-2002: Message edited by: The Toolboi ]</p>