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Simple Question

Go to solution Solved by JebKerman,

almost certainly EVO. you are unlikely to find (enough) use of the extra features that Pro offers to justify the extra cost.

almost certainly EVO. you are unlikely to find (enough) use of the extra features that Pro offers to justify the extra cost.

Aftermarket 980Ti >= Fury X >= Reference 980Ti > Fury > 980 > 390X > 390 >= 970 380X > 380 >= 960 > 950 >= 370 > 750Ti = 360

"The Orange Box" || CPU: i5 4690k || RAM: Kingston Hyper X Fury 16GB || Case: Aerocool DS200 (Orange) || Cooler: Cryorig R1 Ultimate || Storage: Kingston SSDNow V300 240GB + WD Black 1TB || PSU: Corsair RM750 || Mobo: ASUS Z97-A || GPU: EVGA GTX 970 FTW+

"Unnamed Form Factor Switch" || CPU: i7 6700K || RAM: Kingston HyperX Fury 16GB || Case: Phanteks Enthoo Evolv Mini ITX (White) || Cooler: Cryorig R1 Ultimate (Green Cover) || Storage: Samsung 850 Evo 1TB || PSU: XFX XTR 550W || Mobo: ASUS Z170I Pro Gaming || GPU: EVGA GTX 970 FTW+

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I've researched it myself for my own projects and it seems like the Evo is faster but the Pro possibly has the best reliability.

Although I can't imagine the Evo being terrible in reliability, so it'd probably be the pick considering that it's cheaper.

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