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Asus EN8800GT (11/05/2007)

Asus EN8800GT

Entered CNET Catalog: 11/05/2007

SKU: 0610839032488

Manufacturer: ASUSTek Computer Inc.

Manufacturer description

PRODUCT FEATURES: Enjoy groundbreaking real-time strategy game Exclusive hottest DX10 game bundle PCI Express & PCI Express 2.0 support Microsoft DirectX 10 and Shader Model 4.0 support ASUS Splendid ASUS Gamer OSD ASUS Video Security Online ASUS Smart Doctor NVIDIA GeForce 8800GT OpenGL 2.0 support HDCP compliant NVIDIA PureVideo HD technology NVIDIA Quantum Technology

Product summary

The goodThe good: Strong performance on many 3D game titles without an exorbitant price tag; single-slot design simplifies installation; includes Company of Heroes: Opposing Fronts; PCI Express 2.0 support keeps this card viable for future upgrades.

The badThe bad: Market scarcity has driven the price higher; not as fast on some games as less expensive cards from ATI.

The bottom lineThe bottom line: 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.

Average user rating: 0 stars

Editors' review

  • Editors' Choice: No
  • Reviewed on: 12/17/2007

The Asus EN8800GT is the first card we've reviewed with Nvidia's new GeForce 8800 GT graphics chip. You should be able to find this card for just less than $300 or so online, which puts its real world price a bit higher than Nvidia's suggested price of about $250. With its main competition from ATI, the Radeon HD 3870 coming in firmly at $249, you might expect that the new 8800 GT chip would be significantly faster. It's not. On some games Nvidia's new cards wins, but on others, it can't overtake ATI's cheaper alternative. Its saving grace is its capability on the tests it does win, as well as the state of Nvidia's dual-card SLI technology, which is much more robust than ATI's right now. If you can find the EN8800GT for its $300 suggested price, it's not a bad pick, especially if you intend to double up in SLI mode. Just be sure to consider very carefully the games you play, as ATI gives Nvidia's new chip some stiff competition.

The GeForce 8800 GT is not the first midrange card from Nvidia's 8800 series. The 8800 GTS came out a year ago in two versions, one $450 model with 640MB of RAM, another with 320MB for $300. A year later, and the new $300 512MB GeForce 8800 GT beats them both soundly on our benchmarks, as tested by GameSpot's Sarju Shah. Nvidia's new chip also overtakes AMD's similarly priced Bioshock.

3DMark06
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
1,280x1,024  
512MB ATI Radeon HD 2900 XT Crossfire
13,399 
512MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GT SLI
13,296 
768MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTX
11,550 
512MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GT
11,289 
512MB ATI Radeon HD 2900 XT
10,732 
320MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTS
10,628 
512MB ATI Radeon HD 3870
10,465 
640MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTS
9,579 

World in Conflict
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
1,920x1,440, 4x anti-aliasing 4x anisotropic filtering, very high quality  
512MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GT SLI
38 
768MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTX
37 
512MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GT
29 
512MB ATI Radeon HD 2900 XT Crossfire
25 
640MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTS
24 
512MB ATI Radeon HD 2900 XT
20 
512MB ATI Radeon HD 3870
20 
320MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTS
18 

Crysis demo
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
1,600 x 1,200, high quality  
512MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GT SLI
41 
768MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTX
25 
512MB ATI Radeon HD 3870
24 
512MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GT
23 
640MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTS
22 
512MB ATI Radeon HD 2900 XT
18 

Bioshock
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
2,048x1,536, high quality  
512MB ATI Radeon HD 2900 XT Crossfire
81 
512MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GT SLI
79 
512MB ATI Radeon HD 2900 XT
49 
768MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTX
47 
512MB ATI Radeon HD 3870
45 
512MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GT
41 
320MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTS
40 
640MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTS
33 

Company of Heroes
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
1,920x1,440, max quality, 4xaa  
512MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GT SLI
139 
512MB ATI Radeon HD 2900 XT Crossfire
101.5 
768MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTX
85 
512MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GT
80 
320MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTS
64 
512MB ATI Radeon HD 2900 XT
60 
640MB Nvidia GeForce 8800 GTS
60 
ATI Radeon HD 3870
57 

If you look at all of the scores, you'll see that where ATI wins, it slips by with a thin margin of victory. When the 8800 GT is faster, it's faster by a lot. Add in the fact that on certain tests ATI's CrossFire (the dual-card competitior to Nvidia's SLI) is basically broken (as highlighted in our review of the Radeon HD 3850, and the GeForce 8800 GT barely ekes by with an overall win. If you play Crysis or Bioshock regularly and you're committed to a single-card experience, ATI is the way to go. Otherwise, we'd go with the Nvidia card.

While it trades wins with ATI's current generation, the reason for the 8800 GT's advantage over Nvidia's older models is its refined graphics chip design. This chip uses Nvidia's updated G92 design, a revitalization of the original G80 template behind the GeForce 8800 GTX and 8800 GTS. G92 features a 65-nanometer manufacturing process, making it more power efficient than the 90-nm design of the GTX and original GTS. This lets Nvidia cram more processing power on the chip, at less cost, and with less power consumption. That means the single-slot 8800 GT can compete and even surpass the double-slot 640BM 8800 GTS performance-wise, without requiring a massive fan and heatsink assembly to keep it operational.

  GeForce 8800 GT (G92) GeForce 8800 GTS (G80)
Manufacturing process 65nm 90nm
Transistors 754 million 681 million
Core clock 600MHz 500MHz
Stream processors 112 96
Shader speed 1.5GHz 1.2GHz
Memory 512MB 640MB
Memory speed (data rate) 900MHz (1.8GHz) 800MHz (1.6GHz)
Memory Interface 256-bit 320-bit

We should also point out that the new G92 design is PCI Express 2.0-compatible. All PCI Express 2.0 hardware (like the ATI Radeon 3000 series cards as well) will work on the PCI Express 1.0 motherboard, so you don't need to worry about an additional hardware upgrade. And no game that we know of right now will flood the PCI Express pathway with that much data anyway. AMD already has PCI Express 2.0 motherboards out, and we expect both Nvidia, Intel, and others will follow suit early next year. Eventually the software will catch up, and if you go to put this card in a new system a year from now, you'll probably notice some benefit. But at that point newer cards will likely be on the market, so we wouldn't buy the GeForce 8800 GT, or any 3D card simply because it's PCI Express 2.0-capable, at least right now.

If you've noticed that we've suggested that it might be hard to find the Asus EN8800GT or any 512MB GeForce 8800 GT-based card right now, it's because we've seen it out of stock quite a bit in the month and a half since its release. Our suspicion is that Nvidia is limiting the supply of this card, in favor of the cheaper, 256MB 8800 GT, as well as the new 512MB G92 version of the 8800 GTS, (both of which came out earlier this month). The 512MB iteration of the 8800 GTS, though, goes for $350 (and up), is even faster than the new 8800 GT reviewed here. Of course, if the $350 card is the midrange model Nvidia's really serious about, now you're looking at a significant price differential between that and the $249 Radeon HD 3870. It's not uncommon for either graphics card vendor to seed cards and chips that are effectively "reviewer" models, designed to take away buzz from a competitor's launch. We have no way to confirm that that's what's happened, but we're going to err on the side of caution here and not heap too much praise on a product that doesn't appear to be as widely available as others.

Potential supply-side shenanigans aside, Asus has taken Nvidia's chip and assembled a compelling package with its particular take on the 512MB GeForce 8800 GT. Asus includes a copy of the well-reviewed strategy game Company of Heroes: Opposing Fronts, which includes a few DirectX 10 features, to let your new 3D card flex its next-gen muscles a bit. We were also glad to see Asus' handy GamerOSD, a software tool that lets you play around with overclocking and other settings in real time.

If you're less inclined to overclock your 3D card yourself, Asus also sells a factory overclocked EN8800GT TOP, with a 700MHz core and 1,000MHz memory, for a few dollars more. You can also purchase two cards and run them in Nvidia's SLI mode if you have a supporting motherboard. You won't see double the performance, due to the slowdown inherent to added connections, and some games take better advantage of SLI than others, but generally, you can expect a nice boost in speed with two cards. The ongoing release of updated software drivers from Nvidia tends to improve performance and overall game compatibility as well.

The package also contains the basic hardware you expect from a 3D card these days. The card itself comes with two DVI-outputs, but you get a DVI-to-VGA adapter for those displays that require an analog connection. You also get a YPbPr adapter to connect to analog HDTVs, although the GeForce 8800 GT is, of course, HDCP-compatible if you want to connect to a digital HDTV. Finally, there's an adapter for older power supply connections, as well as a leather-bound disc-holder.

System Setup: Intel Core 2 X6800; Intel 975XBX2 (for ATI); eVGA 680i (for Nvidia); 2GB Corsair XMS Memory (1GBx2); 750GB Seagate 7200.10 SATA hard disk drive; Windows XP Professional SP2; Windows Vista Ultimate 32-bit; Nvidia ForceWare 169.01; ATI Catalyst 7.10.

User opinions

Select a User Opinion to view: 1
User Rating:
4.5 stars

out of 1 user reviews

Best value for money.

Pros: Fast as an NVidia generated lightning.

Cons: Can get a tad warm when bad airflow inside PC-case.

Review: So, this is the NVidia decent-priced powerhorse with a lot of horsepower.
Package, as usual with Asus, is complete, with all the necessary cables, a decent manual and a nice game ("Company Of Heroes: Opposing Fronts") included.

I must say that after ATI launched their 3800 series, I was seriously tempted to go for one of those, just because of the fantastic price-tag. It was either that, or go for an 8800GTS from XFX. XFX's 8800GTS is similar to the 8800GT (with a slight to big advantage for the GT), but sports only 320MB RAM, as opposed to the GT's 512MB, which is a necessity whan running games like "Crysis" or "S.T.A.L.K.E.R." in higher resolutions.

But just when I ordered a GTS, I saw that NVidia countered ATI with the release of this here jewel...
Dis-ordered the previous order and ordered an new order... Anyway, I was lucky and had the card delivered in my regular shop the next day (lucky, because the only slight inconvenient with the 8800GT is its availability).
Screwed the kaboodle in my PC and started testing away.

First impressions are fantastic...
Ran "3D-Mark 06" and gathered a score of 12400 points (WIN XP-Pro, Pentium D940, 2GB Apacer 667 DDR2 RAM, GB8i945-Pro mobo, Antec TruePower Quattro 850 PSU), which is astounding, really.

Another big step forward, is power consumption, which on this model is far lower than on the GTS & GTX models, with peaks up to 110 watts (which is almost half of the aformentioned).

But what really beats the competition, is the price of this speedmonster: at €260 (which is less than half of a GTX model) you get a card that can do the same things as the high-end equivalent (but not in the same resolution).

As with all cards of this magnitude, decent airflow inside the PC-case is a must. The (very silent) on-board fan is smallish (resulting in a one PCIe-slot card), but decent, as long as your case is aired sufficiently. Temperatures of around 70°C (max load) are common with the native fan.

Conclusion: for €260, you get a card that outdoes anything anyhow anywhere (xept the GTX), as long as you don't exceed 1600x1200 screen resolution. So, what are you waiting for? Get in line and buy one. Now.

JJ

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Asus EN8800GT specifications

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