Nvidia has launched the latest entrant to their 2013 GTX 700 series
of high-end gaming graphics cards. The Nvidia GTX 760 isn't anything new. Packing the
same die as 2012's GTX 660 Ti (and GTX 670, GTX 680 for that matter),
the company has configured the GK104 (Kepler) die such that only 1152
CUDA cores are active, much lower than the 1344 CUDA cores in the GTX
670 and definitely far lesser than the fully enabled GTX 770 with 1536
CUDA cores.
To that end this launch is a great deal like the GTX 770 launch last
month, with NVIDIA improving performance, lowering prices, and putting
AMD on the defensive all at the same time. Thanks to these performance
improvements and price cuts, the GTX 760 ends up coming within 3% of
the soon to be retired GTX 670 and easily surpasses the GTX 660 Ti, all
the while coming in at a price well below both at $249. Like most
mid-cycle upgrades this is more about bringing existing performance
levels down to new prices, and to that end NVIDIA has delivered on
those goals. Ultimately it's not a new level of performance, but it's a
new price for what a few months ago would cost $350 or more.
With that said, like any good refresh the presence of the 700
series and the retirement of the 600 series looks to shake up the
market, and once more AMD is going to be on the receiving end here.
Rather unlike the GTX 770 versus the 7970 GHz Edition, the GTX 760 is
not tied with any AMD product. At 1080p it is clearly ahead of both the
stock and boost versions of the 7950, by 13% and 8% respectively. This
is by no means a commanding lead and AMD still offers better
performance in some cases, but on average the GTX 760 is faster,
quieter, and $30-$50 cheaper than AMD's closest competitor.
As a result the competitive landscape is clearly in NVIDIA's favor
for the time being. AMD has their Never Settle Reloaded bundle to boost
the value of the 7950, and if this was a repeat of the GTX 660 Ti
launch – where the two cards were tied – then that strategy would be
solid. Ultimately with such a large game bundle only the individual
buyer can truly assign a value to AMD's bundle, but in this case we
believe AMD can't afford to be slower and more expensive at the same
time. At current prices NVIDIA's GTX 760 has AMD beat, in essence
repeating the GTX 670 launch by once more undercutting the 7950.
Wrapping things up, having established the GTX 760's current
control of the $250 price point let's talk about the wider market for
the GTX 760. As a mid-cycle refresh the performance gains over the 600
series won't knock anyone's socks off, but then like most mid-cycle
refreshes this isn't a product targeted at existing 600 series owners.
Rather this is targeted at buyers looking to upgrade their older
55nm/40nm generation video cards, or with the recent launch of Haswell,
putting together a new system outright.
With a $249 price tag the GTX 760 is most straightforward successor
to enthusiast cards like the GTX 560 Ti and GTX 460 1GB. In the case of
the former, now one full cycle old, the performance gains are solid,
with GTX 760 improving on the GTX 560 Ti by about 67%. This isn't
exceptional by any means (the GTX 570 to GTX 770 was 75%) but it's
about average for a 2 year (generational) improvement. Otherwise for a
true doubling we'll have to wait for one more year, as evidenced by the
better than 100% performance gains over the 3 year old GTX 460 1GB.