Regarding the Asus memory frequency support: Asus' own "Edgeup" blog states that all four boards support RAM frequencies up to 3200. The specifications for the PRIME X370-PRO, however list 2666 as the maximum. Makes me wonder which source is the correct one now.
See an excerpt from the table below:
I might be having low FPS expectations, but I haven't encountered a game which my 290x wouldn't run "perfectly" at max settings on a resolution of 1440p, including Star Wars: Battlefront, Battlefield 4, The Witcher 3 etc. I assume a 390(x?) would fair even better.
But anyway, if I were looking...
I think the HIS card performed the best in closed case scenarios tested by Tom's Hardware a while ago, which is why I bought one and have been quite satisfied.
You should really consider buying R9 290 or 290x cards for 4k - they significantly outperform their Nvidia counterparts at such high resolutions due to the wider memory bus and generally larger VRAM. Nvidia cards seem intentionally crippled for those cases.
I'm pretty sure nothing can beat a Qnix in price. They're not perfect (only DVI-D and some light bleed possible), but for that price - a steal!
Bought one recently and am very satisfied.
Having followed this thread since post one I'm quite astounded by the commitment on both your and AMD's side to solving the issue.
You've obviously invested sizeable amount of money in this and have shown admirable patience and resourcefulness. Though I'm just as much if not even more...
I play BF4 on my 8350 setup below on 1440p and do not have any CPU bottleneck issues what so ever.
All 8 cores are at about 50-65% load during 64 player matches. That said, my target is 60fps since I have a 60Hz monitor. I'll take a close look at frame-rates during the weekend and will report...
Yep. We might think of cryptcoin miners as the lowest sort of life-forms responsible for all evil in the tech industry (which, I'm still convinced, they actually are), but at least they are tech-literate people who know what they're doing and I'd definitely rather buy a card from a miner than...
Come to the EU, where gaming gear is still used for gaming and government conspiracy-theorists are still the crazy ones!
Seriously, our prices were just around the RRP all the time or even below that. There's no mining craze here.
That's a good idea. To conveniently recycle my post from another thread about cheap mining cards:
I'd definitely use this nice market opportunity if I were in your situation.
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