Brilliant in its simplicity. Great work, there should be more trustworthy and non-judgmental tutes like this for beginners and gamers returning from long breaks
A computer guy I talked to at a store explained to me I don’t need a super expensive graphics card to get a good 4K pc it’s mostly the amount of gigabytes they can store
they should just have all video cards to start with 16GB of mem and go up with games 12GB is a good size but when you use a computer as a computer and not a X-BOX then you will need more MEM in the video card and system but computers are at a stand still they put out new video cards that don't do more more anyway you buy a video care then wait for 25 years then if it is dead or you like to get a new care then get the lower one and it will be good as they would of put more MEM on the card by then
This video is so helpful Thank you for helping me understand the difference I didn't even know all of those brands were under Nvidia This vid was super informative and I appreciate every second of it💯you just earned a new subscriber💯
you say number does higher it must be better but you lie that is a load of BS some cards can out do newer cards that cost more and you tell people there is 4 numbers what about the GTX 980 ti that has 3 numbers and sometimes is better then a new card in what your going to do with it
Thank you dude, you actually made it so simple when every other channel just starts to overcomplicate shit for the sake of sounding smart and use new terms that they assume you already know. It's like every other channel forgets that a video explaining the differences isn't meant for people who know everything that goes into an asus cockblower 9900rtx5090 BALLSACti. You're a legend m8. You made an excellent explanation that any person could watch and feel like they have the basic fundamental understanding of how the gpu industry works. Made it really easy to understand. (especially for those who have little-to-no pc part picking experience.)
THANK YOU, finally I understand it a little bit better 😅 I know that these companies, when they set a product name, they are probably thinking in those pro players and people very into this PC building world, but for us beginners who want to understand this market they don't make it easy at all. I've liked a lot the example you have used regarding the iPhone, it's completely true, we all understand what a 13 iPhone mean it is, and of course we do understand too what pro means, but kilometric numbers of GPUs...🥵
Nvidia graphics are understandable when I try to compare with each other for making decisions (GTX, RTX), But it's kind of hard when it comes to AMD graphics since I'm not very familiar with it Also every time I searched for laptop with AMD graphics in mind, it always common to see AMD integrated graphics stated instead of specific names (Like I wanted to avoid Vega ones and go for RX series truly)
I require assistance.... My laptop just says that it has a AMD RADEON (TM) GRAPHICS, And I dont know which is it exactly, on the radeon app thingy just says that, on the system specs says that, diaxfax the same, everywhere I try to find my Laptops amd radeon model I only got that Any solutions that you might be aware of??? Also, great video mate.
Greatly explained. Loved the video. I want to know that is the 3060 ti will be better than 3080 or like any is any higher base is better than lower ti?
TI's are more powerful but not as powerful as the next tier up the tens digits. 3060 < 3060ti < 3070 < 3070ti < 3080 < 3080ti. Then there are the Supers. Which are generally between the non-ti and ti versions.