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We have collected 4 reviews of the Nvidia GeForce GTX 660. Experts rate Nvidia GeForce GTX 660 7/10. Reviewsor.com helps you find reviews, best prices, user reviews of the Nvidia GeForce GTX 660 and Nvidia Graphics cards.
NVIDIA is good at many different things, but where the company truly excels is in its ability to fill every conceivable void in the GPU market. Have $100? There's a card for you. Have $150? Ditto. Have $1,000? Can I have it? Just a month ago, NVIDIA released its GeForce GTX 660 Ti, which was received to rather critical acclaim. Specs-wise, the card isn't too far off from the GTX 670 which costs $100 more. But at $300, the card wasn't exactly "affordable" by all standards. NVIDIA knew it had a duty to finally deliver a mainstream Kepler part as close to $200 as possible, and that's resulted in the $229 non-Ti GTX 660. The GTX 660 is equipped with 960 cores, vs. 1344 with the Ti. That comparison alone can give us an idea of what to expect here. Well, it would be easy if NVIDIA, in its usual way, didn't give the core clock a nice boost on the non-Ti edition. Lesser cores, but +65MHz to the clock. An interesting move, and not one that anyone will complain about. Memory density and general architecture layout remain similar between the two cards, although while the 660 Ti is based on the GK104 chip, this non-Ti version uses GK106.
It's a story mainstream gamers know all too well: When AMD and Nvidia release new lines of video cards, they aim them first at those with boundless budgets and get to everyone else later. It has taken Nvidia several months, but "later" is finally arriving for all those who can't (or don't want to) spend upwards of $300 on a video card, regardless of how good it might be. The company's new GTX 660 is priced at $229 list, which is reasonable for those who want to play major 3D titles but don't want to go into hock to do it. You won't get quite the speed or flash with the GTX 660 you do with Nvidia's more expensive single-GPU video cards like the GTX 680 , the GTX 670 , or even the recently released GTX 660 Ti. It's a potent performer for its price, even at resolutions that would have been unthinkable a couple of years ago, and represents a solid upgrade opportunity if you've been waiting a few years. But it's not unequivocally the best you can do.The GTX 660 is based on the same Kepler architecture as Nvidia's other 600-series cards, and delivers all the same benefits, including significantly improved power usage over previous generations and GPU Boost, which dynamically increases the card's performance if there's the proper thermal and electrical headroom. For more details about everything Kepler contains, check out our review of the GTX 680 or our story "Nvidia's Kepler Architecture: 6 Things You Should Know.
NVIDIA is good at many different things, but where the company truly excels is in its ability to fill every conceivable void in the GPU market. Have $100? There's a card for you. Have $150? Ditto. Have $1,000? Can I have it? Just a month ago, NVIDIA released its GeForce GTX 660 Ti, which was received to rather critical acclaim. Specs-wise, the card isn't too far off from the GTX 670 which costs $100 more. But at $300, the card wasn't exactly "affordable" by all standards. NVIDIA knew it had a duty to finally deliver a mainstream Kepler part as close to $200 as possible, and that's resulted in the $229 non-Ti GTX 660. The GTX 660 is equipped with 960 cores, vs. 1344 with the Ti. That comparison alone can give us an idea of what to expect here. Well, it would be easy if NVIDIA, in its usual way, didn't give the core clock a nice boost on the non-Ti edition. Lesser cores, but +65MHz to the clock. An interesting move, and not one that anyone will complain about. Memory density and general architecture layout remain similar between the two cards, although while the 660 Ti is based on the GK104 chip, this non-Ti version uses GK106.
Last month, Nvidia shook up the enthusiast GPU market by launching its most affordable Kepler offering yet. At $299, the GK104-based GeForce GTX 660 Ti was $100 (~30%) cheaper than our previous favorite enthusiast-level graphics card, the GTX 670, while being just 13% slower. Likewise, the GTX 660 Ti was 11% faster and more power efficient than the competing Radeon HD 7870 when testing at 1920x1200 on most games, despite matching it on price. Predictably, AMD neutralized that threat by slashing prices. The HD 7870's price dropped to $249, while the HD 7850 fell from $239 to $209 and the HD 7950 dipped from $349 to $319. This balanced things out, with products from both major GPU makers finding their rightful place in the market. As is often the case, Nvidia dominated the premium segment, while AMD had stronger footing in the mainstream. Ever eager to keep AMD on its toes, Nvidia continues its push into the mid-range market with a Kepler-based card that is expected to retail for about $230 -- right in-between AMD's Radeon HD 7850 and 7870.
| Retailer | Information | Prices | |
|---|---|---|---|
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MSI NVIDIA GeForce GTX 660, 2GB GDDR5, PCI Express 3.0 Graphics Card N660-2GD5/OC | $189.99 | See it |
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MSI N660-2GD5/OC GeForce GTX 660 Graphic Card - 1006 MHz Core - 2 GB GDDR5 SDRAM - PCI Express 3.0 x16 - 6008 MHz Memory Clock - 2560 x 1600 - SLI - Fan Cooler - DirectX 11.0, OpenGL 4.2 - HDMI - DisplayPort - DVI | $189.99 | See it |
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MSI NVIDIA GeForce GTX 660, 2GB GDDR5, PCI Express 3.0 Graphics Card N660-2GD5/OC | $194.67 | See it |
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PNY NVIDIA GeForce GTX 660 2GB 192-Bit GDDR5 PCI Express 3.0 x16 HDCP Ready SLI Support Video Card | $203.8 | See it |
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Msi N660-2gd5/oc Geforce Gtx 660 Graphic Card - 1006 Mhz Core - 2 Gb Gddr5 S | $214.99 | See it |
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MSI Microstar GeForce GTX660 2GB GDDR5 | $215.99 | See it |