With the release of the Vega Nano and people having done some testing on it (including the ol' undervolt + power limit increase), it's nice to see it beat the 1080 in certain scenarios. My only concern, however, is the gargantuan power draw and heat dissipation, not to mention if a Corsair SF 600W would be able to handle it. Looking at the PCPartPicker spec, I could definitely see an increase of 35W compared to the regular R9 Nano right off the bat. I've also heard tales of wattage spiking up upon tinkering with undervolting, which is weird. On the upshot, I hear it actually plays cooler than the regular R9 Nano.
Enter the 1080 mini: I've been eyeing the Gigabyte version for sometime now, as I wasn't sure if ZOTAC's model would fit my rig (not with that HDD in the way), and not to mention the power draw seems to only increase by only 5W! It also seems to run considerably cooler from what I've heard, and it helps the price ends up generally the same as the Vega Nano (after rebate).
Here's the kicker: I don't plan on using FreeSync NOR Gsync as my current monitors support neither, but I do plan on having more multiscreen gaming in the long run while not wanting to be worried too much about reaching Ultra settings at 1366x768@60fps (yeah I know). I also already have games patched for and setting profiles for AMD's Crimson Drivers, so a change to Nvidia's graphics drivers would also mean me needing to reinstall my games and install Nvidia specific fixes instead, but I guess that just comes with the territory with any new graphics card.
From the looks of things, a 1080 mini at stock would already boost my performance by leaps and bounds (provided it's not Forza Horizon 4).
Enter the 1080 mini: I've been eyeing the Gigabyte version for sometime now, as I wasn't sure if ZOTAC's model would fit my rig (not with that HDD in the way), and not to mention the power draw seems to only increase by only 5W! It also seems to run considerably cooler from what I've heard, and it helps the price ends up generally the same as the Vega Nano (after rebate).
Here's the kicker: I don't plan on using FreeSync NOR Gsync as my current monitors support neither, but I do plan on having more multiscreen gaming in the long run while not wanting to be worried too much about reaching Ultra settings at 1366x768@60fps (yeah I know). I also already have games patched for and setting profiles for AMD's Crimson Drivers, so a change to Nvidia's graphics drivers would also mean me needing to reinstall my games and install Nvidia specific fixes instead, but I guess that just comes with the territory with any new graphics card.
From the looks of things, a 1080 mini at stock would already boost my performance by leaps and bounds (provided it's not Forza Horizon 4).