As the title says, which one is a better deal? This is all i need to finish my computer that i expect to not upgrade again for at least 5-6 more years unless something breaks.
380X looks good for $220,
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814202183&cm_re=radeon_r9_380x-_-14-202-183-_-Product but i found one particular 390X for $390 although i noticed this one says its a UEFI card. I checked my bios and it says both legacy+uefi so it should be fine.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814202185&cm_re=r9_390x-_-14-202-185-_-Product Now here is my dilemma...
- If i get the 380X, then the new cards come out and the 390X drops significantly in price, i'll feel i wasted money on a slower card.
- If i get the 390X, then the new cards come out and only the 380X drops significantly in price, i'll feel ripped off.
I'm a very indecisive person and i only buy hardware en i know it will last me a very long time and is really worth the money.
I'm still using my old Radeon HD 6950 1GB i bought in 2010. I need to change that.
My current system:
- Windows 10 (64-bit)
- XFX-650W-3XS power supply (80 plus bronze)
- Z97 PC Mate mobo
- 8GB RAM
- i5 4690 (3.5GHZ)
- hyper evo 212 cooler (haven't installed it, running stock cooler while waiting for a new hard drive and gpu to install everything in one go... me being lazy)
- 250GB samsung 850 evo SSD (will get a 500GB when i find a good offer to dual boot windows and linux)
I appreciate the input. One thing to notice, even if the new cards come out, i would still get one of these too at a lower price. I don't plan to any higher than a 390X any time soon because that would be too expensive for me.
Thanks.
Comments
The 390x would have more longevity and would guarantee higher resolutions as the V-RAM requirement for 4k is pretty high and 8gb will cover it at good frame rates. This would be where the 380x lacks as it only has 4gb of V-RAM. At 1080 resolutions you won't see any difference. This is a "futureproofing" current standards you will see the exact same performance at 4k.
Like I said, up to you really and what type of monitor you are using or upgrading to in the not too distant future.
But then why not wait for nVidia's next launch? And then black friday? Postponing an update to wait for the next generation usually takes a few generations/launches...I would not recommend.
But yeah if you go with a r9 390 or r9 390x - go for a sapphire or msi one. Sapphire have done a really good job with the 390s - incredibly quite, both have backplates to cool the vram, cards are VERY cold compared to my previous 7900 series cards and they are built like a tank.
Avoid Gigabytes and if you can't get sapphire - go for MSI.
But yeah - waiting for the next generation would just lead to more waiting. Honestly if you have the money - buy a 390 or 380x - I don't think the 390x is worth it too much.
Cheers and best of luck.
They probably want me to go for the cheaper 380X instead.
Usually I wait for super deals and spend a lot closer to $200. And the $220 card I bought 4 years ago is running ESO at max graphics without a single problem. It ran BDO at max graphics as well during the beta. Both were at 1080p, btw.
If I decide to invest in VR (probably, but I will wait for the price to drop a bit) I will need to upgrade my video card, but until then I am very happy with my AMD Radeon HD 7870, equivalent to an R9-270, but only DX11 capable.
The world is going to the dogs, which is just how I planned it!
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814500362
People mentioned the Radeon R9 390, and a couple months ago, it was a good value. Not so much today, as it's too much more expensive than the GTX 970 and not cheaper than the 390X by a large enough margin.
Out of those three cards, what to get is really just a question of what you're willing to pay. Any of them would be worthy upgrades from your current card and fit nicely with the rest of your current rig.
And in the meantime, while you wait, you might keep an eye on 380x and stumble on some nice deal.
Well, thats my advice anyway
I would also probably pony up and get a 390x if I were in your shoes at the moment.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814125835
I'm not saying you should. But $470 is down considerably from the launch price, and at that price, the GeForce GTX 980 is a completely irrelevant card.
EDIT: The 380x that cost $220 has an extra $15.40 in sales tax.
Taking that into account i'll either have to go for the 380x or wait for a bigger price drop.
거북이는 목을 내밀 때 안 움직입니다
The world is going to the dogs, which is just how I planned it!