They are powered by the Maxwell GPU architecture from NVIDIA

Mar 7, 2014 13:04 GMT  ·  By

Some might say that Leadtek is kind of late in launching its Maxwell-based graphics cards, but it had only been a month, and not even that, so the company hasn't lost too much time to competing brands.

So here we go. As was the case with most other NVIDIA OEMs when the Maxwell series of GTX 750/750Ti graphics cards finally debuted, Leadtek has two cards for us.

One of them is a GeForce GTX 750 Ti, the other a simple GTX 750.

The former has 2 GB of GDDR5 (5.4 GHz) and a GPU, called GM107-400, with 640 CUDA cores, a 128-bit memory interface, and a frequency of 1,020 MHz / 1,085 MHz boost.

The GTX 750, meanwhile, has a single GB of GDDR5 VRAM (5 GHz) and only 512 CUDA cores, but the same clock frequencies and memory interface.

Both cards have support for FXAA, TXAA, CUDA parallel computing, and Geforce Experience, plus PhysX physics computing.

Nevertheless, they are merely precursors, of a sort, to the single-fan overclocking and dual-fan Hurricane overclocking graphics cards, which Leadtek will reveal soon enough, but on which no information exists as of yet.

The Leadtek GeForce GTX 750 Ti and GTX 750 have prices of $150 / €150 and $120 / €120, respectively.