Testseek.co.uk have collected 24 expert reviews of the Zotac GeForce GTX 465 1GB GDDR5 PCIe ZT-40301-10P and the average rating is 74%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Zotac GeForce GTX 465 1GB GDDR5 PCIe ZT-40301-10P.
June 2010
(74%)
24 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Honestly, I'm not sure what Nvidia was thinking with this one. Surely, its competitive analysis team ran these very same benchmarks and found the GeForce GTX 465 and Radeon HD 5830 trading blows. Surely, the same group of folks hopped online and saw Radeo...
Zotac GeForce GTX 465Looking at the GTX 465 on its own we have a product which is impressive. The card has all of the features we would expect from a new product, from DirectX 11 and OpenGL 4.0 support to the ability to use the latest 3D technology. I...
Abstract: Today we shall review three graphics cards from Zotac based on the high-end GF100 GPU. As you may know, Zotac is a subsidiary of PC Partner, a major Chinese manufacturer of electronics. Unlike another subsidiary—Sapphire—that only makes graphics cards ...
We opened this article stating that the “sweet spot” for NVIDIA was 93%. The GeForce GTX 465 is 93% of the price of the average Radeon HD 5850, so NVIDIA would want to deliver at least 93% of the performance. All told they come very close to this at 1920...
Honestly, I’m not sure what Nvidia was thinking with this one. Surely, its competitive analysis team ran these very same benchmarks and found the GeForce GTX 465 and Radeon HD 5830 trading blows. Surely, the same group of folks hopped online and saw Ra...
Abstract: Although NVIDIA hasn't been able to deal a knockout blow to any of ATI's DX11-class cards at any given price point, the GeForce GTX 465 is interesting nonetheless. For under $300, the GeForce GTX 465 performs well and offers support for DX11 and all of NVIDIA's proprietary technologies like PhysX, 3D Vision, and CUDA. The GTX 465 also proved to be relatively quiet throughou..
Good overclocking potential, Solid performance at lower resolutions, Native HDMI output, GDDR5 memory, Support for DirectX 11, Support for NVIDIA 3D Vision Surround, Support for CUDA, PhysX and 3D Vision
Higher power draw than similar ATI products, Falls behind other cards at higher resolution, Price seems a bit high, DirectX 11 won't be relevant for quite a while
NVIDIA's new GeForce GTX 465 shows some interesting benchmark results. Generally it does very well against the competition at lower resolutions but seems to run out of steam once the resolution is increased. I'm not saying that the card gets slower at ...
The GeForce GTX 400 launch was a difficult one for NVIDIA because of the energy consumption levels, and the associated issues of the the very high end card, but also because they are faced with a relatively high performance to price ratio of the Radeon...
Built well, good performance, packaged well, DX11 support, PhysX and CUDA support
Runs really hot, high power consumption, expensive
We aren't sure about others yet, but ZOTAC is going to price this standard edition of the GTX465 at approx Rs. 18,000. It's a bit expensive but then again it's a new card, so a slightly inflated price at the beginning is expected. Now let's talk of the...