Conclusion
There you have it! We’d like to start out by saying that both the NVIDIA 9800GTX+ and the AMD HD4850 are excellent price-effective gaming cards. Some of our tests put the two cards neck-and-neck, but it is pretty clear that overall, the 9800GTX+ is a more potent performer than the HD4850.
One of the biggest advantages the 9800GTX+ seems to have at the moment is not its raw rendering performance, but the broader adoption of its physics processing engine. It seems that quite a few developers have opted to include support for NVIDIA’s PhysX, and it appears to be the dominant implementation on the market today. As of March 2008, NVIDIA has released PhysX as an open standard, but at the moment, ATI hardware is not able to take advantage of it. We hope that a single standard emerges so consumers can benefit from a unified ecosystem and the cards can more readily display their prowess.
Price also plays a major factor in our ability to recommend one card over the other and we believe they are priced appropriately for their capabilities. The 9800GTX+ retails in the $150-210 range depending on the card and bundle, and the HD4850 can be found for as low as $125. To be perfectly honest, we cannot name a clear winner as both offer competitive performance catering to slightly different value propositions.
Zotac 9800GTX+ AMP! Edition
We were very pleased with Zotac’s 9800GTX+ “AMP! Edition”. Although it is based primarily on NVIDIA’s reference design, the card comes overclocked out of the box and is priced reasonably in comparison to other 9800GTX+ cards. With a decent bundle of accessories and a lifetime warranty, we certainly wouldn’t hesitate to recommend this card. We are pleased to award it with Icrontic’s “Stamp of Approval”.
Pros:
- Solid performance
- Decent accessory bundle and free game included
- Excellent cooling performance and low power consumption
- PhysX support and an excellent F@H card
- Lifetime warranty
Cons:
- Two 6-pin PCIe power connectors really shouldn’t be required given its power consumption
- Card is very long at 10.5 inches and may not fit in some cases.
Correction: The original run of this article erroneously reported that our Radeon HD 4850 employed ATI Catalyst version 8.8 drivers. The article has been corrected to read Catalyst 8.12, the newest available during product testing. We apologize for any confusion this may have caused.