Entered CNET Catalog: 08/23/2006
SKU: CNETATIRadeonX1300XT
Manufacturer: ATI Technologies Inc.
Product summary
The good: Affordable; passable 3D game performance.
The bad: Doesn't differentiate itself enough from other products in ATI's product family; $10 more gets you a faster card.
The bottom line: ATI's Radeon lineup features a confusing array of cards. The budget Radeon X1300 XT is a good card for the money, but we recommend the faster Radeon X1650 Pro because it costs only $10 more.
Editors' review
- Editors' Choice: No
- Reviewed on: 09/07/2006
We like choice, but we become annoyed when too much choice unnecessarily complicates what should be a simple issue. And that's what's going on here. Consider the clock speeds of the Radeon X1300 XT and the Radeon X1650 Pro, both scheduled to hit stores on September 14. The X1300 XT features a core clock speed of 500MHz and an 800MHz memory clock; the X1650 Pro goes 600MHz and 700MHz, respectively. They each provide the same number of vertex (12) and pixel (5) pipelines, and each comes with 128MB of DDR-3 video memory (although you can find each from ATI partners with 256MB). In other words, same card, different clock speeds.
Those clock speeds make a difference in our performance tests, but only barely. We advocate in general getting the best parts you can afford for the sake of longevity and performance, which is why we pick the Radeon X1650 Pro over the Radeon X1300 XT. While we're glad to see that both cards hover around 60 frames per second on Quake 4 and Half-Life 2: Lost Coast at reasonable image quality and screen resolution settings, the Radeon X1650 Pro is faster throughout.
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
| 1,280x1,024 |
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
| 1,024x768 (high quality) | 1,280x1,024 (high quality) |
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
| 1,280x1,024 (high quality, trilinear filtering) | 1,600x1,200 (high quality, trilinear filtering) |
(Longer bars indicate better performance)
| 800x640 (medium textures, full sliders) | 1,024x768 (medium textures, full sliders) |
Test bed:
AMD Athlon 64 FX-62; Asus A8RMVP-Deluxe motherboard; 1GB Corsair XMS 3200XL DDR SDRAM; 160GB Seagate 7,200rpm hard drive; ATI Catalyst beta version 6.8_8.282.1 graphics driver software; Nvidia ForceWare 91.31 graphics driver software.
User opinions
Select a User Opinion to view: 1 2 3out of 3 user reviews
Not the best on the market but certainly not a peice of $hi7
Pros: plays all games i have with awsome framrates and high resolution, the card handles everything iv thrown at it so far, a awsome card for the money
Cons: the visiontek xge is already overclocked stock so overclocking isnt a choice here.
out of 3 user reviews
It gets the job done
Pros: All my games can be played in their highest resolution. Good price
Cons: I couldn't afford anything better
out of 3 user reviews
Ok. But invest more and you will get more.
Pros: The best configuration you can get is the X1300 XT extreme gamers edition by Vistek which ATI's partner.
Cons: Even the X1300 XT XGE still not handle one of the most popular games out there I have Battlefield 2.
Based off of numerous friends recommendations I purchase a ATI Radeon X800XT and happen to get a really good deal for 169 bucks at Fry's electronics in houston plus its an All in Wonder Card so it comes with the TV Tuner capability, TV Remote, TV Connecters, Software. Plus Its has no problem handling the gaming graphics and online gaming part of many games i play like BF2 and Counter Strike Source.
