nsane.forums Posted May 17, 2011 Share Posted May 17, 2011 The company announced today that it has launched its GeForce GTX 560 card which is priced at about $199. The card is available for sale now via a number of different third party graphics card makers. Nvidia launched its GeForce GTX 560 Ti graphics card recently but for people who don't have $250 or so to buy a new graphics card, Nvidia has a new product that might be more to your liking. Nvidia says the GeForce GTX 560 will be able to handle things like PhysX-based game physics effects, 1080p resolutions and Nvidia's 3D Vision all with the lower price point. To prove it, it released a video showing off the GTX 560 running three games. One is the previously released fantasy MMO game Rift, but the other two games are the currently unreleased Duke Nukem Forever and Alice Madness Returns. The video shows off part of the beginning of Duke Nukem Forever running on the PC which will be the only version of the game that will support 3D via Nvidia's 3D Vision glasses and supported monitors. In the Alice: Madness Returns sequence the video shows how the game benefits from Nvidia's PhysX game support with a number of graphical and physics effects that are not present when PhysX support is turned off. In addition to the new graphics card Nvidia has also released new beta drivers for all of its GeForce graphics cards. The R275 beta drivers boosts performances in a number of games including recent titles like Crysis 2, Bulletstorm and Portal 2. It also adds 3D Vision support for a number of current and upcoming games like Duke Nukem Forever, Age of Empires Online, Dungeon Siege III, Portal 2 and more. View: Original Article Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
oZ. Posted May 17, 2011 Share Posted May 17, 2011 GTX 560 Ti came out longgg time ago, manay vendors made 2nd version of thier own 560 already.... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
toyo Posted May 17, 2011 Share Posted May 17, 2011 This is the non-Ti version, for those missing 50 USD :P Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ck_kent Posted May 18, 2011 Share Posted May 18, 2011 Is there an AMD counterpart to Nvidia's PhysX? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
toyo Posted May 18, 2011 Share Posted May 18, 2011 There's no official GPU-accelerated physics engine done by AMD, and it may never be done. They believe in GPGPU and probably will try to accelerate through OpenCL or Direct Compute. Hard to tell. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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