Head Two Head: Matrox Millennium G450

Will Dual Head Be Enough To Survive?

Even with the G400 chip Matrox was not able to provide top performance. Let me clarify something - the Matrox chips are not bad at all, as they support all standards and the 3D features which are important today. They just lack the required performance for fast 3D game flow at high resolutions. When the G400 MAX was released in summer 1999, it was definitely fast enough to beat 3Dfx's Voodoo3 cards, but could not top the performance of a TNT2 Ultra. As you can imagine, the recent chips from nVIDIA and ATI are playing in a different league. 3Dfx performed the jump to faster 3D performance far too late. By using several graphics chips on a single graphics card, today's Voodoo 5 solutions are fast but expensive to produce. nVIDIA was the first to realize how the market would develop. Today they have products both for the performance user and with a good price/performance ratio.

Patrick Schmid
Editor-in-Chief (2005-2006)

Patrick Schmid was the editor-in-chief for Tom's Hardware from 2005 to 2006. He wrote numerous articles on a wide range of hardware topics, including storage, CPUs, and system builds.