None the less, a few weeks ago, NVIDIA started teasing a new Super series, which we still like to refer to as a supercharged product. However, graphics cards anno 2019 have become seriously expensive, that fact alone and all by itself is increasingly endangering the GPU related industry, as why pay 500 to 1000 bucks for just a graphics card when you can buy a complete console for less? That is the core and rudimental essence of the root problem that NVIDIA and AMD are fighting right now.
ASUS ROG STRIX NVIDIA GEFORCE RTX 2060 PC
So what to do in the meantime to satisfy the budget conscious PC gamer? Well, with the help of the RT and Tensor-less GTX 1650, 16 Ti NVIDIA got the noses of many gamers pointed in the right direction again. None the less, NVIDIA chose a direction that in my opinion was the right course to follow, and something they cannot back away from.
There is no audience more critical than a PC Gamer, and when they have to pay a large sum of money for visual differences that are often hard to spot and cost a lot of FPS, you bet that can (and did) backfire. But then it all kinda exploded in their face as end-users looked the other way when they learned about the very steep price level. NVIDIA initiated massive internet virals to gain media coverage.
People had been very interested and were warmed up for DLSS (Tensor) and the ability to play Battlefield V in that hybrid Raytraced way. It has been a strange year for NVIDIA as the GeForce RTX 2060, 2070 20 Ti became available. ASUS adds a factory tweak, custom design PCB and a spiffy cooler. Yes, we review the ASUS GeForce RTX 2060 Strix, NVIDIA has launched graphics cards in their new Super series, as in super-charged. It is a bit of an exclusive, as we've been promised to have the one single media sample of the STRIX in the entire EU.