Originally posted by Whaleboy
WRT gaming, how many units of the Geforce 8800GTS/GTX/Ultra do you think nVidia have sold in relation to the 8600GT/GTS?
I'm going to hazard a guess that the latter completely eclipse the much more powerful former. The iMacs have the new Radeon chips which, I'm told, are more or less on a par with the equivalent nVidia mid-range chips. Is the iMac therefore so severely deficient when it comes to gaming?
WRT gaming, how many units of the Geforce 8800GTS/GTX/Ultra do you think nVidia have sold in relation to the 8600GT/GTS?
I'm going to hazard a guess that the latter completely eclipse the much more powerful former. The iMacs have the new Radeon chips which, I'm told, are more or less on a par with the equivalent nVidia mid-range chips. Is the iMac therefore so severely deficient when it comes to gaming?
The HD 2600 PRO is a better card, you might say it's "mid-ranged", but it's at the low end of that mid-range if you give it that much credit. There's no reason to put it in a $1500 computer. Either you're not worried about performance in games (thus the 2400XT is more than good enough), or you're worried about performance in games, and thus should be getting far more bang for your buck.
Granted you'll have to buy and install a copy of Windows and you may have issues running a modern game at the native resolution of any iMac with a midrange card but the fact is you're not being excluded for the same money as an equivalent PC.
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