Difference between revisions of "NV1"
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While NV1's 3D performance is acceptable for the time, it, along with the Saturn to which the card's technology was based on, didn't hold up to scrutiny due to its use of quadrilaterals instead of the industry-standard polygon rendering. Audio quality was also questionable, with the General MIDI quality receiving lukewarm responses at best (a critical component at the time). Direct3D drivers were released by NVIDIA later in the card's lifespan, presumably as a stopgap solution, but it was slow, buggy and compatibility with DirectX games was hit-and-miss, not to mention that it was software-based. | While NV1's 3D performance is acceptable for the time, it, along with the Saturn to which the card's technology was based on, didn't hold up to scrutiny due to its use of quadrilaterals instead of the industry-standard polygon rendering. Audio quality was also questionable, with the General MIDI quality receiving lukewarm responses at best (a critical component at the time). Direct3D drivers were released by NVIDIA later in the card's lifespan, presumably as a stopgap solution, but it was slow, buggy and compatibility with DirectX games was hit-and-miss, not to mention that it was software-based. | ||
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+ | The card's all-in-one nature, while a key selling point as it integrated graphics, audio and gamepad support in one add-on board, was also a pitfall as it added to the cost, and many gamers were unwilling to switch from their often elaborate multimedia setups. | ||
As with subsequent hardware releases by the company (and many others in general), NVIDIA did not manufacture their own hardware, so the card was sold under various names by board partners. | As with subsequent hardware releases by the company (and many others in general), NVIDIA did not manufacture their own hardware, so the card was sold under various names by board partners. |
Revision as of 09:50, 18 January 2016
NV1 | ||||||||||
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Made for: PC | ||||||||||
Manufacturer: NVIDIA | ||||||||||
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The NV1 is a multimedia add-on card developed by NVIDIA and released in 1995. It was the first video card to be developed by the company, and largely failed to make a dent in the overcrowded PC video card market of the era. It also pre-dates standards such as DirectX.
The NV1 is comparable to the Sega Saturn video game console and shares much of its technology, such as rendering 3D geometry as quadrilaterals instead of triangles. With an extension, it is actually possible to input Sega Saturn controllers into the card. Many of Sega's PC endeavours of the era were optimised to make use of the NV1 hardware, and the unreleased successor to the NV1, the NV2, was pitched to Sega (and inevitably rejected) during the Sega Dreamcast development stage.
While NV1's 3D performance is acceptable for the time, it, along with the Saturn to which the card's technology was based on, didn't hold up to scrutiny due to its use of quadrilaterals instead of the industry-standard polygon rendering. Audio quality was also questionable, with the General MIDI quality receiving lukewarm responses at best (a critical component at the time). Direct3D drivers were released by NVIDIA later in the card's lifespan, presumably as a stopgap solution, but it was slow, buggy and compatibility with DirectX games was hit-and-miss, not to mention that it was software-based.
The card's all-in-one nature, while a key selling point as it integrated graphics, audio and gamepad support in one add-on board, was also a pitfall as it added to the cost, and many gamers were unwilling to switch from their often elaborate multimedia setups.
As with subsequent hardware releases by the company (and many others in general), NVIDIA did not manufacture their own hardware, so the card was sold under various names by board partners.
Compatible games
- Battle Arena Toshinden
- Descent: Destination Saturn [1]
- NASCAR Racing [1]
- Panzer Dragoon [2]
- Virtua Fighter Remix [1]
- Virtua Cop [2]