Testseek.com have collected 180 expert reviews of the NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560 Ti 1GB GDDR5 PCIe and the average rating is 85%. Scroll down and see all reviews for NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560 Ti 1GB GDDR5 PCIe.
January 2011
(85%)
180 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
The NVIDIA GTX 560 Ti marks not only the return of the Titanium suffix (and likely others are pending) to the GeForce line but also another entry into the wildly successful $249 price point. By averaging a 35% performance advantage over the current G...
Abstract: he NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560 Ti is a great video card that destroys AMD's Radeon HD 6800 series, but AMD came out with a Radeon HD 6950 variant with 1GB of memory to head them off! It's a GPU war folks!
Abstract: Also like last generation's midrange cards, the GTX 560 Ti is only nine inches long, which means it will be able to fit in nearly every gaming case on the market; and has the usual requirements of two expansion slots (one PCI Express x16 to plug the c...
Competitive performance. Strong update to previous generation technologies. Relatively low power usage.
Requires 500-watt power supply. Blocks second expansion slot. Some versions of last-generation Nvidia cards are a better value.
With its GeForce GTX 560 Ti, Nvidia is trying to maintain its grip on the sub-$250 video card market, but it faces stiff competition from one of its own cards from the last generation. ...
I think Nvidia summed it up perfectly when they said the sweet spot just got a little sweeter. For those of you who are looking for the best performance money can buy, you should skip over the GTX 560 Ti, but if you have to save money wherever you can ...
It’s hard not to be impressed by the GeForce GTX 560 Ti 1GB. It comes into what’s always been a very competitive spot in the market, and slots between the Radeon HD 6870 1GB and HD 6950 2GB on price. For the most part, it betters both across the range ...
Strong Performance, Cool and Quiet, PhysX and CUDA Support, Competitive Pricing, Highly Overclockable (1GHz card coming)
Requires Two Cards For Surround View, Trailed The 1GB 6950 in most DX11 titles
When the GeForce GTX 460 was first introduced back in July of last year, our conclusion included these statements, “We won't beat around the bush; we really like the new GeForce GTX 460. In just about every regard, the cards are appealing… In the end, we...
Nvidia’s GeForce GTX 560 Ti makes a strong push for the midrange graphics card crown, but savvy shoppers have a few options before them. Nvidia GeForce GTX 560 Ti: A Strong Contender For The Midrange Crown Nvidia GeForce GTX 560 Ti Review, by Nate Ral...
Great gaming experience on a mid range card, Fully DirectX 11 capable, Lower power usage, Excellent power per watt, Low Heat, Very good cooling system, Lots of overclocking potential
When we look at the marketing for this card, NVidia has envisioned the GTX 560 Ti to be the next 8800GT/9800GT, both in popularity and adoption. Given the price point and performance, we don't see that as being too lofty of a goal to attain because i...
Substantial performance improvement over GTX 460, Reasonable pricing, Quieter than other cards in this performance class, HDMI output, Support for DirectX 11, Support for CUDA / PhysX
Power draw limiter could complicate advanced overclocking, Still limited to two active display outputs per card, DirectX 11 relevance limited at this time
In a segment where we know a surprise awaits us with every new release, the GeForce GTX 560 Ti lived up to being a bundle of surprises. To begin with, it can bulldoze through any game at any resolution, making DirectX 11 games playable even at the high...