Will a GT730 DDR5 bottleneck with E2160 @ 1.8Ghz & 2GB of RAM?

Devil_

Commendable
Oct 25, 2016
23
0
1,510
Hey I really want the answer of this question.
I'm planning to buy it and I'll replace it with my current *GT210*(which made me happy those days :))
If it bottlenecks (well I know it'll) how much framerate will I get in :-

1.) GTA IV ( I can run it @ 30FPS lowest settings as possible with low-end patch applied)

2.) Sleeping Dogs (I'm not sure it sometimes gets over 30 and even below 18)

3.) Battlefield 3 ( 20-25 lowest)

4.) NFS-MW 2 (20-25 lowest)

5.) CS:GO (25-30 lowest)

I'll be grateful if you can answer it good.

Thankyou.
 
Solution
A GT730 will be a nice upgrade.
But, be careful which one you buy.
GDDR5 is not necessarily faster than one with GDDR3.
The key is to buy a GT730 64 bit version, not the 128bit version.
The 128 bit version has 96 cuda cores and is clocked higher.
But, the 64 bit version has 384 cuda cores which makes it considerably faster.

For a similar price, I would buy a factory refurbished GTX750ti like this:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814487115

Ultimately, you will want a stronger cpu, but any discrete graphics card you buy can be transferred to a new pc.
A GT730 will be a nice upgrade.
But, be careful which one you buy.
GDDR5 is not necessarily faster than one with GDDR3.
The key is to buy a GT730 64 bit version, not the 128bit version.
The 128 bit version has 96 cuda cores and is clocked higher.
But, the 64 bit version has 384 cuda cores which makes it considerably faster.

For a similar price, I would buy a factory refurbished GTX750ti like this:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814487115

Ultimately, you will want a stronger cpu, but any discrete graphics card you buy can be transferred to a new pc.
 
Solution

Devil_

Commendable
Oct 25, 2016
23
0
1,510


Well I knew that I should buy a DDR5 version, I was just wondering about Bottlenecking.