Longevity. I build a computer once every 6-10 years and don’t do much upgrading in between. Buying a beefier GPU means it’ll play new games well for a good long while.
And it’s not like I’m doing this all the time. I was curious about the power usage, so I made a script to monitor it and starting tinkering with settings to see what the delta would be. I’m a 100% ultra, max resolution 95% of the time.
I have to disagree.
Why buy a high tier GPU just to nerf it?
Save yourself money and just buy a lower tier GPU.
Longevity. I build a computer once every 6-10 years and don’t do much upgrading in between. Buying a beefier GPU means it’ll play new games well for a good long while.
And it’s not like I’m doing this all the time. I was curious about the power usage, so I made a script to monitor it and starting tinkering with settings to see what the delta would be. I’m a 100% ultra, max resolution 95% of the time.
I’m just thinking of using what I already have… I also suspect there is an efficiency sweet spot than running at full capacity
Oh, absolutely. The higher-end you go, the more the product is tuned for balls to the walls power with no consideration for efficiency.
As the extreme example, the 4090 can deliver almost 94% of it’s full potential when limiting its power draw to about 70% and/or undervolting it.
(Not exactly sure about the numbers, but you get the idea)