[quote]Nvidia is going to be coming out with quite a few cards through the end of '09. A good way to go is get a GTX 260 OCed or OC it yourself, then if you like the other stuff they come out with better, like the GT300 DX11 models, you can swap it out without huge loss. You could also add another GTX 260 if you find the others aren't to your liking.
I've seen GTX 260s for under $200 and some at 650MHz for only $220.
good idea....GT300 DX11 is tempting. i might get GTX 260 OCed or just get the GTX 280.
are the GX2 that much more powerful than the GTX 280? as in double performance? and do the GTX 280 overheat like the GX2? (i assume not?)I forget to mention, if you can wait at all, the current Nvidia cards will likely drop significantly in price when the 40nm GPUs come out, which will be soon from what I've heard. It will probably be common to see 260s for $150 or less and 280s for $350 or less.
Personally, I wouldn't bother with the GX2, unless it's a more perfected future model. They've had performance issues with those. Generally with any two GPU on one card designs you have more potential for driver/performance problems and in the case of Nvidia's dual GPU card, you only effectively get half the VRAM too.
The way Nvidia SLI is getting you'll be able to pick a good MB (like the X58) and stick with it for years, upgrading the CPU and adding a GPU for SLI. The only problem is even the second to top of the line GPUs are now double slot, yet the new MBs support tri SLI/Crossfire. It's almost getting to the point where the ATX form factor is too small for the current enthusiast level gaming gear.
Even with dual SLI/Crossfire you wind up with only one PCI slot, and tri SLI/Crossfire makes it hard to even fit a sound card in at all, let alone anything else.