Members login
Site Assistance
Newsletters
RSS Feeds
Home
News & Blogs
Videos
White Papers
Downloads
Reviews
Laptops
Desktops
Monitors & LCDs
Graphics Cards
Handhelds
Phones
Software
Networks
Printers
More »
home
/
reviews
Graphics Cards
search
Go!
Graphics Cards
You found 1125 items
Find by price
$50 - $60
(61)
$60 - $80
(113)
$80 - $90
(58)
$90 - $110
(86)
$110 - $140
(88)
See all prices
Find by manufacturer
HP
(134)
EVGA
(96)
PNY Technologies Inc.
(96)
VisionTek Inc.
(79)
Diamond Multimedia
(75)
See all manufacturers
Find by video input
Video capture adapter
(8)
TV tuner
(3)
Or find by
Miscellaneous compliant standards
Graphics processor
Graphics performance
Windows Vista Readiness
Output Port(s)
See all
SORT BY:
Product name
|
Lowest price
|
Editors' rating
|
Review date
Check products to
Reviewed on 06/24/2008
Diamond Viper Radeon HD 4850
AMD's new ATI Radeon HD 4850 is a solid midrange 3D card that will run pretty much anything, and it boasts some forward-looking features to boot. It might be worth waiting for the price to drop just a bit, at which point this card will become much more attractive.
Specs:
ATI Radeon HD 4850, 2560 x 1600, 512 MB, PC, 2
$189 - $235
at 3 stores
Check prices
Find local stores
Reviewed on 06/16/2008
Asus ENGTX280
Nvidia's new GTX280 graphics chip brings fast 3D performance and exciting new possibilities for speeding up certain kinds of multimedia applications. We'd be more enthusiastic about this card if the software was available to take advantage of the new features.
Find local stores
Reviewed on 04/09/2008
Zogis GeForce 9800 GTX
Nvidia's new GeForce 9800 GTX chip is fast enough, but if your PC is SLI-capable you can spend just a little more and get a significantly better high-resolution gaming experience. Consider your options carefully before upgrading to this card.
Specs:
NVIDIA GeForce 9800 GTX, 2560 x 1600, 512 MB, PC
Find local stores
Reviewed on 03/18/2008
Asus EN9800GX2
Nvidia's new flagship 3D card delivers almost all the performance we expect for its price. If you can live with "almost," at this price range, then this is a solid PC gaming option. We also wouldn't blame you
Crysis
fans for waiting to see what's in store later this year.
Rebate
Find local stores
Reviewed on 02/21/2008
Asus EN9600 GT
Nvidia's new GeForce 9600 GT graphics chip gives the Asus EN9600 GT some of the best bang-for-the-buck we've seen in a midrange 3D card. If your goal is reliable frame rates in the latest PC games, you should pick this card up as soon as you can.
Specs:
NVIDIA GeForce 9600 GT, 2560 x 1600, 512 MB, PC, 2
Rebate
$109 - $177
at 3 stores
Check prices
Find local stores
Reviewed on 01/30/2008
ATI Radeon HD 3870 X2
The 3D graphics card market changes too rapidly for us to get bullish about a card with premature driver software. The ATI Radeon HD 3870 X2 shows promise, even outscoring Nvidia on many PC games, but we would still wait until AMD works out the kinks before handing over your $450.
Specs:
ATI Radeon HD 3870 X2, 2560 x 1600, 2 GB, PC
Click
here
to see this card from ATI's partners.
Find local stores
Reviewed on 12/17/2007
Asus EN8800GT
Asus and Nvidia have teamed up for a compelling midrange 3D graphics card with this EN8800 GT. It doesn't completely dominate a less expensive card from ATI like we'd hoped, so players of certain games should stay away. But if you can find this card for a good price, we recommend it, especially if you intend to use two of them.
Specs:
NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT, 2560 x 1600, 512 MB, PC, 2
Rebate
$333
at 1 store
Check prices
Find local stores
Reviewed on 11/21/2007
ATI Radeon HD 3850
Despite the usual caveats of an ever-fluctuating 3D market, for the moment, at least, ATI's new Radeon HD 3850 graphics card delivers the best bang-for-the buck in PC graphics hardware. Until now we haven't had an acceptable sub-$200 option for PC gaming this year. Thanks to AMD, now we do.
Specs:
ATI Radeon HD 3850, 2560 x 1600, 256 MB, PC, 2
Click
here
to see this card from ATI's partners.
Find local stores
Reviewed on 08/02/2007
ATI Radeon HD 2600 XT
If you're looking to build a home theater PC, we recommend ATI's Radeon HD 2600 XT as the midrange card to use, thanks to its nearly perfect HD video image and its no-fuss installation. But for 3D gaming, you'd be much better off looking for a good deal on a faster, older graphics card.
$224
at 1 store
Check prices
Find local stores
Reviewed on 04/17/2007
EVGA e-GeForce 8600 GTS (PCI-e, 256MB)
If you care more about HD movie watching than gaming and you need a new video card for the task today, we recommend a 3D card like this EVGA with Nvidia's newest mainstream graphics chip. Gamers can get more performance value from Nvidia's higher-end 8800 cards, but for anyone, it would be a good idea to wait to see what's new from ATI in just a few short weeks.
$99 - $129
at 5 stores
Check prices
Find local stores
Check products to
1-10 of 1125 |
next 10 products
!-- /leftCol -->
Premier Vendor Content
Whitepapers, webcasts & resources from our Power Center Sponsors
ZDNet News Videos
Tech news covering the latest in products, conferences and blog commentary, from ZDNet video.
Watch the latest video >>
FREE Economist Report available at the Collaboration Resource Center.
"Collaboration: Transforming the Way Business Works", a new study from the Economist Intelligence Unit. Find this informative report along with free videos podcasts and more, availibe courtesy of Cisco.
Sign in now to download!
New entries posted to Know Issues, Best Practices and Workarounds Wiki
Latest Topics: Running virtual machines and DHCP can cause Intel® AMT to be inaccessible; Wildcard certificates are currently not supported for remote; Dell 755 returns a duplicate UUID during activation configuration.
See the latest entries on the Intel Wiki >>