For more details regarding how Trade Up works, visit the promotion's official website. It remains to be seen whether or not the Trade Up program will become a permanent fixture in the Asus ecosystem. As we noted before, EVGA already offers a more fleshed-out version of the service, so allowing Trade Up to stick around could help Asus remain competitive. Still, we won't be holding our breath. Post a comment 27 interactions. Add your comment to this article. You need to be a member to leave a comment.
Join thousands of tech enthusiasts and participate. TechSpot Account Sign up for free , it takes 30 seconds. Already have an account? I wouldn't mind having a slightly uglier card for the increased performance of an I purchased the card from Newegg, and while I thought that their VGA return policy covered 90 days, which would have been enough to last me until the comes out, it turns out that the policy only covers 30 days.
I currently have about 5 days left before the order reaches its 30 day mark. Customer service of asus sucks aswell ,does the RMA department. They are the tightiest on the planet.. That beeing said the problem is the stuff they make is awesome you just need to buy.
You should sell your card and invest in GTX Under GTX you will not be satisfied. Problem is because and GTX is on edge with video memory. And I didn't want that and I sold GTX and bought after 3 months custom overclocked Ti because if I want some performance improvement than from overclocked model I need to cross on newer series absolutely same or even higher overclocked.
Step up is good only if you have reference card, or example from to Ti Or similar thing if you want from Z87 motherboard to Z97 motherboard No custom models on step-up.
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