![]() ![]() He is talking about the experience of having something in SLI vs a single powerful card. ![]() I would wait, sell the GTX 660 when something new comes out and then buy the fastest single card you can afford at that time. Those GTX 660s will be limited by memory bandwidth long before they are limited by shader power. Personally I would not recommend going SLI in this case. This is why most people recommend getting the fastest card for their money before considering SLI. But you will get a very consistent experience. Sure you pay more for a slower card with a GTX 680. Even then the user may experience microstutter makes the experience of the game less than what the raw benchmark score tells them it should be. Those GTX 660s may need a new SLI profile to perform at their maximum potential. Sure you will get higher benchmark scores with a couple of GTX 660s over the fastest GTX 680 but the GTX 680 will always work at its full speed in every game without any driver updates. Namely microstutter and not having SLI profiles for new games meaning you might be stuck with only one card working until a driver update is released. Multi GPU setups will always have more problems than a single card. Click to expand.He is talking about the experience of having something in SLI vs a single powerful card.
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