NVIDIA's GeForce GT 430: The Next HTPC King?
by Ryan Smith & Ganesh T S on October 11, 2010 9:00 AM ESTBattleForge: DX10
Up next is BattleForge, Electronic Arts’ free to play online RTS. As far as RTSes go this game can be quite demanding, and this is just at DX10. DX11 isn’t even a practical option for value cards like the GT 430.
The GT 430 fares even worse here than it did in Crysis. We had always considered BattleForge to be a shader-constrained game, but at these lower settings there’s a lot of proof that we’re looking at ROPs and/or memory bandwidth, both of which the GT 430 is short on. The Radeon 5670 is approaching double the performance for the same price, a very dire outcome for the GT 430.
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geok1ng - Tuesday, October 12, 2010 - link
The other consumer grade low cost Blu-Ray Player is the PS3. It qould be nice to have baseline HQV2 numbers for the last firmware of PS3 , so that readers could get a measure of how much picture quality, if any, a HTPC has over a PS3.As for the 3D HTPC card, i simply do not see the owner of a 3D TV using such a low end card. The minimum budget wise is a 768MB 460.
Now NVIDIA should work for a passive card that can beat the 5750 on picture quality, until then it is a PS3 for 3D Bluray and a 5750 for HTPC.
Arnejoh - Tuesday, October 12, 2010 - link
Some of us in here likes to see how new and old Nvidia cards is doing as dedicated Physx cards. There is some tests out there like fluidmark. And i know this is no problem for experts like you @Anandtech :)Hrel - Tuesday, October 12, 2010 - link
Looks like the only card I'd buy for the low end is the HD5670. Slowest card you can buy that allows acceptable gaming and it's a great HTPC card. You can easily find fully silent versions.manokius - Wednesday, October 13, 2010 - link
It's quite simple:an HTPC Must Be Quiet!Power consumption is a factor but most of all you need tranquility when watching movies etc.
So, you need a FANLESS card for not adding noise to the system apart from what the CPU and PSU emits.
What is this then and why is the author giving it the title "HTPC King"?
krumme - Wednesday, October 13, 2010 - link
"The next HTPC King?"Well and the answer to that was pretty much a weak no in my reading.
We have dirt cheap ontario hdmi 1.4, 3d comming with a cpu+gpu for less than this card. This is unfortunately 2 years to late.
dragonsqrrl - Wednesday, October 13, 2010 - link
"unlike all of NVIDIA’s other desktop launches which had GPUs with disabled functional units, the GT 430 uses a fully enabled GF108 GPU. For once with Fermi, we’ll be able to look at the complete capabilities of the GPU."I believe the GTS450 incorporated a fully activated gf106 with 192 SP's, did it not?
Ryan Smith - Thursday, October 14, 2010 - link
All of its SPs, but only 2/3rds of its ROPs and memory controllers.BoonDoggie - Thursday, October 14, 2010 - link
How can any card that cant do decent gaming @ 1920x1080 be called an HTPC card? What a douchebag title. HTPC video cards have to be:A) Able to do video decoding.
B) Do gaming at the defacto standard of 1920x1080.
C) Do it quietly.
NO HTPC card should even be considered unless it can do these. Yes you can get by without gaming, but, since an HTPC can do gaming and console type gaming is regularly seen on the main TV at home, I think it should be a needed quantifier of a decent HTPC card.
Radeth - Monday, November 1, 2010 - link
Hi!I'd like to build an HTPC and I got some questions..These are the specs:
MB: Zotac H55-ITX-A-E
CPU: I3 530 2,92 GHz
RAM: 4Gb DDR3 Kingston SO-DIMM
Optical: LG slim DVD writer
HD: WD Caviar Green Power 500 Gb 3,5"
GPU: Undecided between HD5570 and GT430 or other
What would be the best card to use (even one i didn't mention like GT220) with a 120W power source mini-ITX case?
Thank you
MavAnan - Saturday, November 13, 2010 - link
The review says: "For now, the Radeon HD 5570 is a clear winner from the picture quality standpoint."Does the 5570 also beat the GT240 from the picture quality standpoint?