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GTX 650 MSI GeForce Power Edition Video Card Unboxing & First Look Linus Tech Tips

Linus Tech Tips@LinusTechTips93.2K viewsSep 13, 20127:35
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The GeForce GTX 650 is NVIDIA's answer to the low end offerings from their competitor. CA: ncix.com US: us.ncix.com

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The video provides an in-depth unboxing and first look at the GeForce GTX 650 MSI Power Edition. It begins with the presenter introducing the card and outlining that this MSI Power Edition is an overclocking friendly variant designed to offer enhanced cooling and volt options, which are intended to squeeze extra performance from a value-oriented GPU. The presenter walks through the box contents, noting the accessories such as a dual Molex to PCIe power adapter, various adapters, and driver disk, while also pointing out the card’s support features like Direct X 11, 3D Vision, NVIDIA Surround, and adaptive vsync. He then explains practical considerations for surround setups, the limitations of SLI on this tier, and how the PCIe interface and memory configuration relate to real-world gaming. The card’s cooler design is highlighted, including a unique open airflow layout and MSI’s TransThermal cooling design, which is described as optimized for silence and cooling performance. The unboxing concludes with a demonstration of how the optional fan modules can be added or removed, effectively transforming the card’s cooling and length, before summarizing that this GTX 650 Power Edition aims to deliver strong value and overclocking potential for mainstream gaming. The presentation ends with a call to subscribe for more unboxings and computer videos, reinforcing this as a first-look review tied to practical gaming performance expectations. In the second segment, the presenter delves into the technical specifics of the GTX 650, including the GK107 GPU, 128-bit memory bus, and the card’s 1GB GDDR5 memory configuration (with a 2GB variant also available). He contrasts it with higher-end GPUs like the GTX 660 and 660 Ti to frame performance expectations and explains how NVIDIA’s Kepler features, anti-aliasing technologies, and PureVideo HD contribute to the card’s feature set. The reviewer discusses the card’s PCIe 3.0 support and the implications of a 16x slot, clarifying the absence of SLI connectors on this model while noting potential future multi-GPU setups. Throughout the review, concrete design choices are linked to practical outcomes, such as airflow efficiency, VRM cooling, and potential noise levels, and the video closes by reaffirming the product’s value proposition for budget-conscious gamers and PC builders.

Topics · hardware unboxing · graphics cards · pc hardware · tech review · gaming pc