Conclusion
Conclusion
In the last few weeks we have seen quite a few comments on various forums which voiced worries that spending big bucks on a new graphics card will prove to be a waste due to the false hope that new flagship GPUs are just around the corner. And cards like the GTX 580 Super Overclock are more than powerful enough to provide excellent framerates in any game released within the next year or so.
When taken at face value and with its own merits, the Gigabyte GTX 580 Super Overclock is one hell of a graphics card. It offers a laundry list of improvements over the reference GTX 580 and even has some space left in the tank for additional clock speed increases. Performance is also top notch but the real story here is the Windforce 3X heatsink. While actual temperatures may have taken a back seat to the MSI card, a lower acoustical profile allowed the Super Overclock to become one of the quietest graphics cards we’ve ever tested in any price bracket. Truth be told, you’d be hard pressed to hear a stock GTX 580 when installed in a case but that shouldn’t diminish Gigabyte’s accomplishment in any way.
Considering many reference GTX 580 cards can be found for under $500, the Super Overclock may not seem all that appealing to most buyers. And yet we find this card to be well priced in relation to many other GTX 580s. However, its main competition is actually the MSI Lightning; a GTX 580 that offers exactly the same in-game performance but retails for about $20 less.
In this market segment $20 may not seem like much but other than brand preference, there is really no reason to recommend the Super Overclock over the Lightning. Other than a nearly undetectable edge in the acoustics department, both cards are on nearly equal footing to most buyers. For overclockers though, MSI's card boasts more features like DIP switches, an easy to access BIOS toggle and well designed voltage read points which could prove to be the tipping point.
When push comes to shove, the Gigabyte GTX 580 Super Overclock is one hell of a card. The competition between it and the MSI Lightning is a complete toss-up on the performance end of the spectrum but for the time being we give the MSI card edge due to its slightly lower price.
This brings us back to many people’s original question: is it worth spending this kind of cash for a high end GPU? In our opinion, $540 may be a ton of money but it buys you a card which will last a long, long time before obsolescence comes knocking.