There are two 1060 parts one with 3GB of VRAM (often called a mini, as it's shorter than the 6GB cards) and one with 6GB of VRAM. The GTX 1060 is equivalent to the old GTX 980 in performance ( - note performance of the 980 vs the 1060 in the benchmarks here). You'll need to upgrade your video card (as that's your real bottleneck here).
#Tekke 7 specs 1080p#
If you want to run at 1080p with maximum detail. Oprindeligt skrevet af Squiggly1:There's no reason you can't overclock the CPU by 200Mhz as it's turbo speed is already 3.3GHz (you might even be able to do it without touching the voltage supplied to the CPU in your BIOS, here's a guide: ). Also, the 1060 is a better deal when buying new as the GTX 980's (even though they perform pretty much the same as the 1060) are still more expensive when buying new (by almost $100 compared to the 6GB GTX 1060). I'd recommend going with the 6GB parts as games today, even at 1080p are using higher resolution textures that consume more VRAM, and the 6GB part will give you some headroom. The ones with 3GB start around $180 jumping to about $250 for the 6GB parts. There's no reason you can't overclock the CPU by 200Mhz as it's turbo speed is already 3.3GHz (you might even be able to do it without touching the voltage supplied to the CPU in your BIOS, here's a guide: ).