In the realm of GPU overclocking everyone uses MSI Afterburner regardless of which manufacturer you buy from because it
works with all nVidia cards. I'm almost positive that all the overclocking programs are based on drivers and not which
manufacturer you buy from. However, if you buy a super special card (like an EVGA Classified GTX 580 or the Asus MARS II)
you may be forced to use that particular manufacturer's tool.
The reason I (and almost every other EVGA customer) will recommend EVGA is because of their amazing tech/customer
support and their warranty. EVGA also has a large forum (like this one) where you can ask questions and get a lot of
suggestions from regular members on how to go about whatever it is you're wanting to do/fix. And... EVGA offers a 90 day
step-up program for nVidia reference cards. None of this is a comparison to MSI since I've never used MSI hardware before.
As for the GTX 560, most people overlook the fact that there are two different GTX 560's that carry 2GB of VRAM. I don't
know if you're talking about the base GTX 560 or the GTX 560Ti. For $280 the base GTX 560 is expensive... so I'll assume
you mean the Ti model. In my opinion, I wouldn't go with anything lower than the Ti model of the 560 even though the
regular 560 isn't all that worse. I only say this because I like to play with a lot of eye candy which takes more GPU
horsepower. I will always recommend an awesome single-card solution over a mediocre dual-card solution for multiboxing
because it's just less hassle.
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