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报告翻译问题
http://www.tomshardware.co.uk/answers/id-2742111/difference-gpu.html
Or if I can find a graphics card that costs much less than $1o0 dollars and is a reasonable good one, that'd be even better
It's still great, quick googling tells me it's about on par with 360/750Ti in power and cost me 50€ used from a friend. And a new bigger monitor gives me more resolution, not wasting my money on something I don't need. After the monitor would come bigger/faster SSD, more HDD space, another 16GB of RAM and many other things before upgrading GPU. In fact it's one of the least important parts so they get recycled from old PC even when every other part is brand new. I focus on games with actual content and gameplay, if I want fancy graphics I'll just watch a movie or out of the window. :)
SImple.. your PC has more standardized parts and configurations than your gfx cards. You may have notice that outside ram and hdd, most cpu components have remained in more or less stasis for a while. There are no i9 cpus and i7's have been around for near a decade now. Gfx cards are constantly being retweaked and modified so the toplevel cards do not have economies of scale on their side.
The other, real reason is saddly because the manufacturers know they can get away with the over pricing. People who like to boast pabout their fps have historically proven very willing to spend large amounts of mony on that e-peen extension.
If you actually want a gfx card.. aim mid-level not high end. Next years mid level cards will be on par with the previous year's high end monster. But significantly cheaper.
There have been several generations of i7 CPUs already, they increase the model number like GPUs. Also actually make new ones for every generation instead of relabeling exactly same crap as model +100(0) making people believe it's somehow better to buy, when in fact it can be worse since they used cheaper parts. Best performance per price is usually in the 100-200 range, after that you end up paying +50% for +10% performance.