Asus Debuts ROG MARS 760 Dual-GPU Graphics Card
Asus has announced a dual-GPU GTX 760 that will be known as the ROG MARS 760.
Asus has announced another off-planet graphics card, this one coming from Mars. The ROG MARS 760 Dual-GPU graphics card which, as the name indicates, has fused two GTX 760 graphics cards onto a single PCB.
As such, the card features a total of 4 GB of GDDR5 memory and a dual 256-bit memory interface. The card also features a 12-phase VRM design, which, according to Asus, makes the card produce 30 percent less power noise, increases efficiency by 15 percent, and extends the card's durability.
Cooling is achieved by a DirectCU II cooler that has been modified to cool both the GPUs.
Of course, what is the release of such a card without any performance numbers? Asus has informed us that the card can outperform the GTX Titan, running Crysis 3 percent to 14 percent faster, Tomb Raider 39 percent faster, and Bioshock Infinite 6 percent faster.
There was no word on pricing, but given what we know of Asus ROG graphics card pricing, don't expect it to come cheap. It'll hit shelves around the end of November.

Asus, I really like your products, but come on... If you price it in GTX780 territory this will earn a recommended, but otherwise, forget it. Don't waste your time on this product.
Cheers!
If this card has 2GB per GPU, then please don't describe it by saying it has
a total of 4GB because that's very misleading. The total visible to the user
& system is still just 2GB, thus it's a 2GB card. Marketing madness is bad
enough these days; don't make it worse by adding to the manufacturer spin.
Ian.
But considering that 760's can be found as low as 220 this better be a good deal but we will likely see it at 500.
Wrong. The 760 Ti is an OEM-only card. In fact, that card has been out. Alienware sells it.
Depends on the games one is playing, resolution, desired degree of detail, etc.
I had two 560 1GB Tis (900MHz) and although performance was very good
(easily matching a 670), the VRAM was occasionally limiting, and combined
they couldn't quite let me max everything out in Crysis2. Hence, I switched to
two 580s which really does kick up the performance by a good margin (faster
than a 780).
I suppose it boils down to what one regards as an acceptable performance
improvement when doing an upgrade, and that's affected by numerous
factors, eg. no point changing the GPU if one's CPU is a bottleneck. Without
a doubt though, assuming no bottlenecks elsewhere, a modern GPU such
as a 780 will be at least double the speed of a 560Ti, unless you're playing
old games which rely on older DX9 features, or a game that's incredibly CPU
bound such as X3TC.
Ian.