I'm planning to buy a new videocard and wanted to ask for some advice. I'd like to play StarMade with a decent framerate, even when large ships and planets are involved. I have an Intel Core i7-3930K CPU @ 3.20GHz and 12 GB RAM. Any recommendations?
While sort of true, i think it's purely over driver compatibility, not a case of coding for one over the other.Bottom line: NVidia is preferred by the devs over AMD/ATI.
Good advice for more than just Starmade (of which those cards will give ample performance), the 900 / 1000 series are really great cards able to play most modern titles with high to max settings at 1080p.That means that a NVidia card will definitely support the game. ~ This advice goes double on Linux due to the fact that drivers for NVidia on Linux are better than Linux drivers for AMD.
You should be safe picking out a 900 or 1000 series NVidia GeForce card.
Example:
EVGA 1060 3GB (strange VRAM amount)
This other thread also goes into some detail on video cards, among other components.
yeah .. no ... you cant answer the question "what would be good for x" .. with x not being the most graficaly demanding thing on earth with .. get the most powerful card on the market (which would be the Titan XP then i guess)in my opinion:
right now you'll just about get around with a gtx 1080
however 1080 ti when it comes out will be optimal
These two pages talk about power consumption for these types of cards. Generally, I think you are talking about 120 watts per hour per card for Starmade, on top of your computer's baseline wattage. So if you are talking about 2 hours a day, you are talking about one-fourth of one kilowatt-hour of power each day. If you play an average of 300 days per year, that averages out to about 75 kilowatt-hours. Plus another 100 or so for the rest of the computer, depending on if you shut the whole computer down at the end of your gaming session.I would be interested about power-costs when you run starmade 2 hours a day for a year too.
Additionally, should I buy one time an expensive card and 5 years nothing or every 3 years a cheaper card? I think cheaper cards are better, because the old ones I can give to the older generation of my family which play Tower-Defence at most.
The cheaper card may have the advantage of being old enough for Linux to catch up on driver support.
Actually the 870 or 780 would be optimal, for optimized optimability in an optimal rig.in my opinion:
right now you'll just about get around with a gtx 1080
however 1080 ti when it comes out will be optimal