Diamond Viper HD 3650 PE 512MB Review
June 5, 2008
ATI’s HD 3650 replaces the HD 2600 Pro, a frustrating underachiever. Generally, I dislike video cards in the $50-100 range, mainly because they’re not going to play new games well and, if you’re after features, then you’re better off buying a lesser model from the same series.
The features here are the real selling points–I’m going to jump the gun and assume that, for gaming, this card doesn’t break the mold–two of which stand out ahead of price, connectivity (HDMI), and low power-consumption. First is video playback. ATI swings when it comes to playing movies, and even their entry-level cards are going to do well, if not flawlessly. Second is Hybrid CrossFire.
All 3000-series cards can be run in CrossFire with motherboards that have the 780G (and upcoming 790GX) chipsets, in either a performance mode (like regular CrossFire) or power-saving mode, which completely powers down the video card when integrated video is good enough. Combined, these features might give cause to move up a price bracket, favoring a 36 over a 34.







