The i740 is newer and actually a good card. If you want to go for it, I'd recommend a Real3D Starfighter for its quirks, since i […]
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The i740 is newer and actually a good card. If you want to go for it, I'd recommend a Real3D Starfighter for its quirks, since it has its own (interesting) drivers. It can't be overclocked via software though. You'll have to change the oscillator for that.
The 6326 has very good compatibility but with some visual bugs and usually not fast enough to play in 640x480. But if you want the best version, you can't go wrong with the Diamond one, which is clocked at 100MHz. I have one, 105MHz doesn't make it a good gaming card of the era, but it's enough to have some fun.
The Laguna3D is best in Chaintech version, clocked at 83MHz. I have one too. I remember it to be decent with Forsaken but it's overall poor in 3D. It can be overclocked using a registry key, but not much.
The Alliance is pure trash.
Very interesting alternatives are Verite 1000, especially the Creative version, because it supports both Creative and Speedy 3D APIs.
Even more expensive is the very first nvidia chip, the nv1, which is pretty good for a 1995 card, but not many games support it.
A bit cheaper and good enough to have some fun are the Mpact 2, with its very unusual architecture, and the Number9 revolution3D. Both are good enough to have some fun too.
The best "exotic" card to play with might be the PowerVR though, very unusual architecture, can be quite fast with some games and a good CPU. I remember Unreal to be impressive on it. It's good (and fast) on Tomb Raider, even in 1024x768, and it's the best way to play some games with period correct hardware (Mechwarrior 2 and Resident Evil notably).
It has some interesting exclusive games (Virtual On).
It's rare and expensive though.