Compare Gadgets Vs. Compare

EVGA GeForce GTX 460 Pro Reviews

Fudzilla‘s review Edit

If you’re an Nvidian, and you’ve been waiting on Geforce DirectX 11 gaming card price-cuts – then today is your day. EVGA GTX 460 Superclocked offers excellent overclocking potential without stressing your cooler and adding noise, but you won’t make a mistake if you choose the reference model either, as it too can easily be overclocked to at least 800MHz.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Jul 12, 2010

Tom's Hardware‘s review Edit

The bottom line is that EVGA’s GTX460 FTW offers something that I’ve never before seen in a card with an extreme factory overclock: excellent performance relative to its price. With GeForce GTX 470-class gaming ability combined with lower power usage, noise, and heat, EVGA’s option truly lives up to it's name and surpasses other GeForce GTX 460 cards for the win.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Dec 23, 2010

TechRadar UK‘s review Edit

A quick look at the performance benchmarks on the previous page tells you almost everything you need to know about EVGA's GTX 460 FTW Edition. It is simply the fastest GTX 460 you can buy. The Zotac card comes in with a clockspeed of 810MHz and the MSI with a not inconsiderable 780MHz. The EVGA card's core speed of 850MHz drags though it past the competition. It's not a massive speed boost, only a couple of frames per second at most, but it's enough to give it the 'fastest' accolade.
8.0 Rated at:

Published on:
Oct 11, 2010

HEXUS‘s review Edit

With a nod to the lower price points, performance is sharp. The cheaper 768MB card just about squeaks through against the Radeon HD 5830. What's more, both new GTX 460 cards overclock really well and, adding a much-wanted feature, includes bitstreaming support for HTPC buffs.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Jul 12, 2010

HEXUS‘s review Edit

The benchmarks show that SLI'd EVGA SC 768MBs are able to trade blows with the better cards, bridging the gap between the GTX 460 divisions, but the smaller framebuffer makes certain games run not quite so smoothly at the higher resolutions. We laud EVGA for going with a SuperClocked card that betters the reference GTX 460 768MB in every way, but, if push came to shove, would spend the same £360 (two cards) on two GTX 460 1GB models.
8.0 Rated at:

Published on:
Jul 26, 2010

hardwarecanucks‘s review Edit

Simply put, EVGA GTX 460 SC EE is one of the best graphics cards we have tested due to its near perfect coupling of high end performance and mid-tier pricing.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Jul 21, 2010

TechRadar UK‘s review Edit

The Superclocked cards, though, still have a hard time justifying themselves. Sure, they give impressive performance results and for the same price as a GTX 480, but the cheaper stock 768MB and 1GB versions will keep you just as happy in your SLI gaming.
10.0 Rated at:

Published on:
Aug 31, 2010

hardwarecanucks‘s review Edit

On its own the EVGA Superclocked is a great product that gives a nice bump in actual gameplay framerates and using a pair of them will result in simply jaw dropping capabilities without a massive investment. As such, this setup receives our Dam Good Value award.
n/a Not rated

Published on:
Jul 14, 2010

TechRadar UK‘s review Edit

Despite the impressive factory overclock and incredible warranty offer, the Superclocked GTX 460 from EVGA just cannot stand up against the power and pricing of the GTX 460 1GB cards.
8.0 Rated at:

Published on:
Jul 21, 2010

The average pro reviews rating is 8.5 / 10, based on the 9 reviews.


How we do it

We humanly agregate professional reviews from a number of high quality sites. This way, we are giving you a quick way to see the average rating and save you the need to search the reviews on your own. You want to share a professional review you like?