
The GT520 quite frankly sucks to today's standards.

I *can* continue with this box for a bit longer (surprisingly), so my budget beyond that is difficult to justify.ġ)Upgrade the GPU. I'm wondering what I can do to improve performance without investing too much into this- I'm currently saving up for some camera gear which would actually improve my workflow, so anything over $500 might need to wait until later. With 4k, my system is finally showing its age, though. It actually still performs well enough for virtually all of my work even today, especially since I'm still working primarily in 1080p timelines, but I'm starting to shoot more footage in 4k since some of the more modern cameras do better in that scaled down to 1080 than they take in 1080p natively. Its actually held up remarkably well for danged well nearly a DECADE, which is longer than I've ever owned any single computer and ever expected to. In the comparison of GPUs, it is really important which of them - Intel HD Graphics 4600 or NVIDIA GeForce GT 730 OEM - is better for games with different system settings.My current spec- don't laugh - is an i7 2600, GT520, 16GB RAM, and 3 internal drives (128GB SSD, 1.5TB and 2TB). Uncertain – There is a little information for making FPS statistics. Uncertain – There is a lack of information for data analysis. May Run Fluently – The perfect balance of gaming performance and technical specifications of the GPU.

The graphics accelerator will run at less than 40 frames per sec.įluent – The GPU efficiently copes with the detailed drawing of more than 60 frames per sec. It is a poor result by now.įluent – Here are the average system requirements. Some lags are possible even at low monitor resolution.įluent – The GPU is able to draw from 20 to 30 frames per sec. May Stutter – The system requirements are not compatible with the GPU.


Stutter – Too low performance of the GPU is not able to draw 5 frames per sec to the full extent.
