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Asus EAH3850 X2 1GB review

in Graphics cards

Verdict

An appealing addition to the ranks of dual-GPU graphics cards - but right now the price is too high.

Review Date: 30 Apr 2008

Reviewed By: Darien Graham-Smith

Price when reviewed: £205 (£236 inc VAT)

Overall Rating
4 stars out of 6

Features & Design
5 stars out of 6

Value for Money
3 stars out of 6

Performance
5 stars out of 6

Graphics card manufacturers' obsession with multi-GPU boards continues this month. The Asus 3850 X2 brings to market the novel formula of two ATi Radeon 3850 GPUs on one card.

Though the combination may be new, it's functionally very similar to the existing HD 3870 X2. The 3850 and 3870 cores are basically identical, the only difference being that the 3870 runs at higher internal speeds and supports GDDR4, while the lesser chip is only offered with GDDR3.

Physically, Asus' 3850 X2 card closely resembles its 3870 X2 too: it's a double-height card with twin fans which, while not aggravatingly noisy, make a distinctly audible whirring. As with the older product, the card can be overclocked in software when powered by one 6-pin and one 8-pin plug.

In our graphics card Labs, we found the 3870 to be 20% faster than the 3850, so we expected a similar performance gap between the dual-GPU versions. But the 3850 X2 exceeded expectations.

At standard clock speeds in our 1,600 x 1,200 Crysis test at high detail levels it averaged 20fps. An HD 3870 X2 card in the same system improved on this with a score of 23fps.

Less punishing tests told a similar story: turning detail down to high enabled the 3850 X2 to average a smooth 29fps, just behind the 3870 X2's 33fps.

Unfortunately, while the HD 3850 X2's performance sits neatly between single and dual 3870 cards, the expected launch price doesn't.

At £205 exc VAT, the 3850 X2 finds itself in direct competition with the 3870 X2 - not a battle it's likely to win. The only advantage the card offers over its bigger brother is slightly lower power consumption: during our tests, our system's total power draw hovered around 270W, while switching to a 3870 X2 pushed this up to 300W.

But once prices fall into line with the market, the 3850 X2 will make an appealing alternative to the 3870 X2. It offers enough graphical power for all but the most demanding games, while undercutting the power demands - and, soon, we hope, the cost - of a top-end card.

Author: Darien Graham-Smith

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