Biostar Reveals GeForce GTX 750 Ti OC Graphics Card
Biostar has released its own version of the GeForce GTX 750 Ti about a month back, but now the company has decided to unveil an overclocked version of this graphics card. The Biostar GeForce GTX 750 Ti OC is based on Nvidia’s first-generation Maxwell architecture, and it is able to cope with most modern games without requiring a lot of power. The card comes with 2GB of GDDR5 memory on a 128-bit wide bus while its 640 CUDA cores are factory overclocked to 1127Mhz and feature a Boost clock of 1178Mhz.
As far as cooling is concerned, this Biostar product comes with a dual-fan cooling design that keeps the card’s temperatures in check while ensuring decent aesthetics. The BIOSTAR GeForce GAMING GTX 750 Ti OC boasts a mini-HDMI output as well as dual DVI. It’s true that this particular card came out quite some time ago and has since been replaced by the GeForce GTX 950, but it looks like Biostar has not given up on this model just yet. Those of you who don’t mind playing the latest games on low/medium settings will probably be interested in this Biostar offering, especially since the pricing is bound to be quite affordable. Below you will find a complete list of specs for Biostar‘s newest GTX 750 Ti.
- NVIDIA GeForce GTX750Ti GPU.
- 2GB GDDR5, 128bit, full-size PCB.
- FPS unique dual fan cooling design.
- Special Gaming OC revision.
- Dual DVI/miniHDMI output support.
- PCI Express 3.0 x16 bus interface.
- Support NVIDIA PuroVideo HD Technology.
- Complete DirectX 11 support.
- Support NVIDIA PhyX and CUDA Technology.
750 Ti is more than capable of High settings gameplay though not at 60FPS at 1080p, but for those using lower resolution monitors/TVs, it’ll really do the job. I can assure you that since I have a Low Profile version myself and these cards overclock amazingly well.
yeah well problem is if you are a pc gamer (this is sold to them after all) you will not go 720p you would buy xbox if you want that quality…. I personally run mine on 1440p and waiting for prices and tehnology to drop so i can go 4k 120hz… thats what age of pc gaming we are in
I think you should take into consideration that there are people still running lower Resolution Monitors. Quite a lot of people in fact. I mean, we can’t discredit any PC gamer for deciding to go with a lower end monitor, as we can’t discredit any PC gamer for using lower end hardware. Not every one is willing to spend £600-700 for a upper mid-range/high end system, and many who are on a tight budget will take cuts and make compromises where they need to or want to.
For example, what if someone bought an amazing PC but they’re connecting it to a HD Ready TV? Playing at 1080p would be a PUNISHMENT because it scales poorly and blurs the image quality. Or what if someone did buy a 1366×768/1600×900 monitor but they’re not complaining? It’s what they will run with.