I am currently building a desktop computer and I'm not for sure if I'll able to run minecraft smoothly. I have a i5 devil's canyon, 8gb ram, Z97 pc mate motherboard, GTX 750 ti EVGA graphics card. I just want to know if I can run minecraft or any games at good settings.
You can't rate GPUs based on their bus width or core clock or VRAM. It's a lot more complicated than that. If you want to compare GPUs, look at benchmarks. That way you get actual real-world performance.
I am currently building a desktop computer and I'm not for sure if I'll able to run minecraft smoothly. I have a i5 devil's canyon, 8gb ram, Z97 pc mate motherboard, GTX 750 ti EVGA graphics card. I just want to know if I can run minecraft or any games at good settings.
That would be OK for Minecraft although it might lag in some games that requires 256-bit graphics cards.
Completely incorrect. The bus width of a GPU isn't a measurement of performance, nor does it limit what games you can play.
Gaming PC Specs - Intel i5-2500K ~ ASUS P8P67M-Pro ~ Hyper 212+ ~ MSI GTX 970 OC ~ 8GB DDR3 Ram ~ 250GB Samsung EVO 850 ~ 500GB HardDrive ~ XFX 550w PSU ~ Fractal Core 1000 ~ Windows 8.1 ~ Samsung P2350 1080p Soon upgrading to GTX 1080/R9 490X + 1440p 144Hz
Macbook Pro 15" Retina - Intel i7 ~ 8GB Ram ~ Nvidia GT 650M ~ 256GB SSD ~ 2880 by 1800 Screen <3
All right, how about the core clock of the GPU?
You can't rate GPUs based on their bus width or core clock or VRAM. It's a lot more complicated than that. If you want to compare GPUs, look at benchmarks. That way you get actual real-world performance.
Gaming PC Specs - Intel i5-2500K ~ ASUS P8P67M-Pro ~ Hyper 212+ ~ MSI GTX 970 OC ~ 8GB DDR3 Ram ~ 250GB Samsung EVO 850 ~ 500GB HardDrive ~ XFX 550w PSU ~ Fractal Core 1000 ~ Windows 8.1 ~ Samsung P2350 1080p Soon upgrading to GTX 1080/R9 490X + 1440p 144Hz
Macbook Pro 15" Retina - Intel i7 ~ 8GB Ram ~ Nvidia GT 650M ~ 256GB SSD ~ 2880 by 1800 Screen <3