Conclusion
First of all lets talk about prices. Let's
consider that the two GTX 960 reference design together cost 390 Euro. Compare
that to the 510 Euro you'd have to pay for the cheapest reference GTX 980 we can
find. Therefore this one high-end card is significantly more expensive than the
two mid-range models. To be precise the price difference is almost 31 percent.
To dive a bit deeper into the results, we start with performance differences in
3DMark graphics score where we see that one GTX 980 is 8 percent quicker in
FireStrike Performance than two GTX 960 in SLI, 2 percent running FireStrike
Extreme and 116 percent faster when executing FireStrike Ultra. In the next theoretical test we ran,
Unigine Heaven High Preset, we see that the GTX 980 is on average 38 percent
quicker
in 1080p, 26 percent when running 1440p and 64 percent using our 2160p preset. In
the case of games it turns out that the performance differences highly depend on
the resolution combined with details level. In other words we see that the GTX
960's memory is the bottlenecking factor, since 2 Gigabyte are simply not enough
for UHD with high levels of detail. When running 1080p resolution we see that
the two 960s are faster in eight out of 13 games we have in our charts. In The Borderlands The Pre-Sequel
the GTX 960 SLI is about 13 percent quicker than the single GTX 980 and Tomb
Raider at 1080p shows the SLI setup is 15 percent ahead. A closer look at Assasin's
Creed Unity shows the other end of the scale, where a single GTX 980 scores 47
percent better than the two GTX 960s and it's the same story when looking at Far Cry 4,
where the difference is about 27 percent. In the case of GRID Autosport we find 37 percent and Sniper Elite 3 shows 25
pecent higher frame rates on the GTX 980 than on two GTX 960. Switching resolutions to 1440p and 2160p
shows that the two GTX 960's actually struggle to provide enough frames per
second in order to generate a smooth gaming experience. Especially at 2160p we
see that the 2 Gigabyte GDDR5 memory on the GTX 960 cards is simply not enough
to make games run at playable frame rates.
Overall the two GTX 960 cards are performing really well and there is no doubt
the two of them are quick. It's a pity there is not GTX 960 with 4 Gigabyte
VRAM. Since it's rather clear that 2 Gigabyte GDDR5 memory is not enough to run
1440p or 2160p smoothly we would have been very curious to see how two GTX 960's
with 4 Gigabyte VRAM each stacked up against one GTX 960 with the same amount of
VRAM. Last but no least we also had a look at power consumption and we notice
that two GTX 960's in SLI make our system burn 12 percent more power than one
GTX 980 in Idle. Under load the difference shoots up to a whopping 62 percent.
If you're about to spend roughly 390 Euros on two GTX 960's these days we'd
recommend you to opt for one single GTX 970. Although frame rates will be lower
at 1080p, especially with higher resolutions you will see a huge benefit since there is twice the VRAM.
Apart from that, if you should have the funds, the GTX 980 is, without the
shadow of a doubt, the most powerful graphics card money can buy today.