Creative Geforce 4 4400 review
4 out of 5
£280
For
Great speed at the price
Against
No DX9 support; now superseded
With gaming graphics becoming more and more advanced, is your current graphics card up to scratch? Creative, working with nVIDIA have taken the PC graphics card one step further with the launch of their Geforce 4 Titanium range and in particular their 4400 card.
Coming with a number of features the card main attribute is that it has 128Mb of 550Mhz DDR (Double Data Rate) memory on board allowing it to create over 1.12 trillion operations a second. Couple that with an 8.8Gb memory bandwidth that allows the graphics to be processed quickly and efficiently and you'll find the days of having to chose the lowest settings in games a thing of the past.
While the large fan and onboard heat sink will cool the card to allow this supreme performance, on the outside the card won't let you down either and alongside the VGA port it also offers a TV socket and a DVI (Digital Video Interface) allowing to connect to any monitor that has a digital output socket.
Showing off the graphics cards abilities shouldn't be a problem and as with all graphics cards from nVIDIA and Creative it comes with a demo CD showing what is capable. Examples here as ever are awe inspiring, the squid and its many tentacles and the werewolf ducking and diving through the shadows both show you what is capable. Demo's are one thing, but what about gameplay?
Coming with a number of features the card main attribute is that it has 128Mb of 550Mhz DDR (Double Data Rate) memory on board allowing it to create over 1.12 trillion operations a second. Couple that with an 8.8Gb memory bandwidth that allows the graphics to be processed quickly and efficiently and you'll find the days of having to chose the lowest settings in games a thing of the past.
While the large fan and onboard heat sink will cool the card to allow this supreme performance, on the outside the card won't let you down either and alongside the VGA port it also offers a TV socket and a DVI (Digital Video Interface) allowing to connect to any monitor that has a digital output socket.
Showing off the graphics cards abilities shouldn't be a problem and as with all graphics cards from nVIDIA and Creative it comes with a demo CD showing what is capable. Examples here as ever are awe inspiring, the squid and its many tentacles and the werewolf ducking and diving through the shadows both show you what is capable. Demo's are one thing, but what about gameplay?