Is the GTX 750Ti good for gaming, at the resolution 1366x768?

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For gaming you need the better videocard first and foremost. You are at a relatively low resolution, but that is counterbalanced by your desire for 60fps gaming at medium/high settings in demanding games. So really you still need videocard power. This rules out any 750 in my opinion.

A Pentium G4560 paired with a 1050 Ti will get you what you want at that resolution. I wouldn't buy older generation stuff(ie DDR3 based) unless you can get a really great deal on it or if you already have lots of ram and other things that you want to use in the new system.

atljsf

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buy new a 750 ti, no, this gpu was replace with the 1050 that is almost double as fast

gta v depends more on the cpu than on the gpu

if you really can't affor a 1050 and you find a really cheap 750 ti used, well could work but not a 60fps at hd resolution you mention on ultra guaranteed
 

MrNoodles

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I've played GTA V and Rainbow Six Siege at 1080p with a worse card and got decent frames. Not sure about H1Z1 because I don't know how well optimized it is, and I couldn't run the Division at all since I had an AMD build. I'd imagine that you would be fine running both of those games, though.
 
The issue here is that the 750ti uses old technology, and that means that you get less performance for the price. I recommend you not buying this card, because it is too expensive, compared to other cards with better performance.
If you really cant afford the 1050(Even though it is a great shout, and they are basically the same price), then you should try to find a cheap amd card, they often get a bad rep but their low-end cards are actually pretty good.
The answer is: Yes this is still a good card, and you will probably be able to run most of the mentioned games, it just doesn't match the price and performance of the newer cards.
Sorry for the bad grammar and the long post, i hope this answers your question.
 
At 720p the 750 Ti should give you playable framerate, not great, not necessarily smooth, but playable. It IS a gaming card after all, it's just an entry level card. I agree with the others that the 1050 is preferred unless you can get the 750 Ti a lot cheaper. At low resolution, such as yours, the entry videocard does a lot better than it would at 1080p, however you want to play very demanding games. So really you need all the extra performance you can get if possible.
 

rusztmas

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I'd like to play on medium-high settings, and my monitors resolution is 1366x768. I've got two choices:
-buy 4460 and 750ti 4GB then replace the video card after about a year
-buy a 6100 and 1050ti 4gb and replace the cpu after about a year.
I'd rather do the first one, because i found a really good motherboard for it. But only, if i can play games, like gta v, and the games, i've listed above, and similar to those, at medium-high 60 fps, in 768p. What do you think about this?
 

atljsf

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i wouldn't buy a 4th gen intel cpu, the i3 possibly will be as fast or faster than that

it depends on the budget you have

i personally only would buy a 750 if it was really cheap

the 1050 is almost double of it on 1080p, what i think you want and need

also consider the pentium 4560, almost the same at 60 dollars but needs a 7th gen mainboard and ddr4

as you see, most options will make you check your wallet and consider what parts you already have can be moved or sold/stored for later use
 


you are far far better off with the 6100+1050ti - a lot of the time the 6100 will actually outperform the older haswell 4460 even though its an hyperthreaded dual core.
I puts you on the most recent intel platform from the off & is far more futureproof.
 

atljsf

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if you buy online, ideally, all mainboards come with the desired bios

when you go to the store, almost none will be with updated bios

outside us and uk, most of us buy directly on the store, especially when you need the parts quickly
 
For gaming you need the better videocard first and foremost. You are at a relatively low resolution, but that is counterbalanced by your desire for 60fps gaming at medium/high settings in demanding games. So really you still need videocard power. This rules out any 750 in my opinion.

A Pentium G4560 paired with a 1050 Ti will get you what you want at that resolution. I wouldn't buy older generation stuff(ie DDR3 based) unless you can get a really great deal on it or if you already have lots of ram and other things that you want to use in the new system.
 
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