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NVIDIA GeForce GT 1030 Sneakily Gets G-SYNC Support

btarunr

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NVIDIA GeForce GT 1030 is the company's cheapest and smallest GPU based on its "Pascal" graphics architecture, and is targeted at people who need IGP-replacement graphics cards around $50. Besides fewer shaders, it has a reduced software feature-set, with the notable omission of NVIDIA G-SYNC, the company's proprietary adaptive V-sync technology. We get that someone who pays the $150-200 premium for a monitor that supports it is unlikely to game on a GT 1030, but one user found otherwise.

With the latest GeForce drivers, Redditor "wantkitteh" found that their MSI GeForce GT 1030, when paired with an Acer Predator G-SYNC capable monitor (best guess XB272), was offering G-SYNC controls in the NVIDIA Control Panel. The monitor's OSD settings utility confirmed G-SYNC to be enabled. To meet the requirement, you need GPU and monitor to support G-SYNC, and be connected by a compatible DisplayPort 1.2 (or later) cable. It's something.



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Good news when playing under 30 frames with this card on modern AAA games, except A.C. Origins.
 
Great if you want to play older games and have an old g-sync monitor lying around.
 
This is good news for people that buy a 50$ video card and a 400$ monitor.
Definitely much more useful than putting vesa adaptive sync support into the driver. /s
 
This is good news for people that buy a 50$ video card and a 400$ monitor.
Definitely much more useful than putting vesa adaptive sync support into the driver. /s
With current graphic card prices, it could be a good placeholder for a while.

50$ where? i can only see prices of 80$+
I agree, even the GT 1030 is going up, higher than the $70 it was for good while.
 
I've got a GT 1030 which isn't as weak as you might think. It's actually about as fast as the top end GTX 285 from 2009, which I also have. See my showdown thread for a couple of benchies demonstrating this. https://www.techpowerup.com/forums/threads/qubits-gt-1030-v-gtx-580-showdown.235223

Run an older game on it and it flies, or a newer one with reduced settings. Hence, adding G-SYNC support to it isn't such a stupid idea and I'm surprised that NVIDIA crippled it before.
 
Well, adaptive sync technology is not limited to games. Videos use various framerates, like 24, 30, 50, 60 fps and more, so having a card that can adjust to them is definitely a benefit. If the software supports it too.
 
Run an older game on it and it flies, or a newer one with reduced settings. Hence, adding G-SYNC support to it isn't such a stupid idea and I'm surprised that NVIDIA crippled it before.
I can vouch for this, too. Seen countless videos on the performance of this card, even with lower-end hardware than my FX-6300. 720p does great for demanding games like Witcher 3(40s on High settings), A.C. games(excluding Origins), and so on.
 
Well, I have Acer XB272 and msi 1030 gt with dp port. However it shows the option G-sync on the NV panel but when I turn this on, the moniter will go blink sometimes, my another GTX980 works fine but no blinks.
 
I'd be much happier if they hadded HVENC support to the GT 1030.
 
I'd be much happier if they hadded HVENC support to the GT 1030.
Right? No one in their right mind is gaming on this thing, let alone with a very expensive GSYNC monitor.
 
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