I can't find words to describe how satisfied I am with the purchase of this particular graphics card.
We're talking about essentially changing my PC by simply changing the graphics card. My old card was an Nvidia GTX 1650 Super with 4 Giga VRAM.
Also, my PC is considered "old," I have an ASUS TUF Gaming B460-PLUS M/B with PCIe 3.0 while this card is PCIe 4.0.
My CPU is i3-10100f @ 3.60 GHz and 48 (useless) giga of memory at 2666 MHz.
I see on a Samsung LS24AG32x screen at 1920x1080 with a refresh rate of 165 Hz.
If you have a similar setup and are thinking about upgrading, forget it. You don't need to.
Of course, I pushed the card to its limits, testing the following games:
1. Cyberpunk 2077 with Ray Tracing Overdrive. Check the Benchmarks.
2. Kingdom Come Deliverance. Everything on Experimental.
3. Ark Survival Evolved. Ultra Settings.
4. No Man's Sky. On High Settings.
5. Sons of the Forest. High Settings.
6. Elden Ring. Everything Ultra with Ray tracing. (Amazing optimization from From Software, the game had the best Response and PC Latency of all, but I'm still getting my butt kicked)
7. Starfield. The most "clean" in graphics of all, at first I played it on lowest settings but now it even gives me 120 fps with frame generation.
8. Dragon's Dogma 2 Here, my friends, the card was put to the test, the graphics are magical and with DLSS it outputs up to 120 FPS, it drops in battle but in no case did the game stutter.
And finally, for the "enthusiasts," I use software called DLSS Swapper, with which I upgrade the DLSS of the games I play to the latest version.
Happy Gaming
(26-01-2025): I uploaded a video on YouTube with the most "demanding" game, Dragon's Dogma 2, playing with DLSS on and off.
The blurriness in DLSS is not due to the specific technology, but is a problem of the specific game, which is still enjoyable even without it.
https://youtu.be/XVYcrWgSROE