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As a bonus, add which games you enjoyed with it, and with which games you noticed the gpu starting to falter.

Let's see if I can remember mine correctly:

Voodoo 2 8MB
The main games I remember playing with were Unreal, G-police and Incoming. I think it started to falter a bit with the first Half-life.
Riva TNT 16 MB (or was it 32MB)
I think I mostly enjoyed Half-life, homeworld and the Sims on it. Iirc I it struggled a lot with Black&White.
nForce motherboard with integrated GPU ?MB
Bit of a weird one, but it worked reasonably well with Warcraft 3, Neverwinter Nights,Hitman Blood Money and GTA3. I remember it struggling a lot with C&C Generals.
ATI Radeon 9600 256MB
The 9800 was all the rage back then, but this one still managed to run Half-life 2 and Far Cry very well. Iirc it could run Battle for Middle Earth at high, but not at full graphics. Ditto for Half-life 2. Which didn't matter too much since HL2 looked great on medium graphics already.
ATI Radeon 2900XT 512MB
I'll never forget how amazed I was when I started up STALKER with this gpu for the first time. Exquisite graphics and silky smooth gameplay. Honestly can't remember where I noticed it falter. Iirc it even ran Crysis very well.
Radeon 5870 1GB
Last one I owned in a desktop pc. The main games I enjoyed with this one was Arkham City, Fallout 3 and Starcraft 2. I remember thinking Arkham City stuttered a bit when covering too much of the city at a time.

Since then I only used mid-range laptops with ok-ish gpus. Not worth mentioning :P Hopefully I'll get to build a proper rig before the end of the year.
Post edited February 23, 2022 by Matewis
I basically went 3dfx all the way (they got purchased by nVidia):

Voodoo 2 12mb --> nVidia Ti4200 128MB --> nVidia GT6600 GT 128MB --> GTX 275 896MB --> GTX 660 2GB --> RTX 2070 Super 8GB

Can't really remember when/why I retired them, other than the Voodoo 2 not being able to cope with Black and White. The rest I did when I upgraded my computer, apart from possibly the Ti4200, where the fan died and it was easier to just replace with a cheap GT6600.
Considering only discrete GPUs:
[end of list[

As for others, the earliest one I have used that's well supported with an open source Linux driver is the one in my old desktop, the Intel HD 4000 series. Some more recent games don't run on it, but it's not that bad for its time.

I also have a laptop with a celeron CPU and integrated graphics that I've used to play Ikenfell, a laptop with an AMD 3500U that's handling Bloodstained and the two Pathfinder games, and a desktop with an AMD 5600G that I haven't yet gotten to boot.
I think I went through about 4 in my life so far although I only remember the last 2.

No idea - was too young to care at that point. It was a PC my father bought and I have pretty much no idea what was in it.

Don't remember - I still have the PC stashed in the attic of my grandparents' house but can't remember what's in it. It definitely had some Nvidia card in it.

GTX 780 (2014-2018) - All that was needed for 60 FPS gaming on 1080p. Played pretty much anything on it without issues up until I upgraded in 2018.

GTX 1080 Ti (2018-now) - the main reason for upgrade was me going up to a high refresh rate monitor. Still pretty adequate in the current year for high refresh rate 1440p gaming. Can't quite squeeze the full value of my 240 Hz monitor from all games, but still very satisfactory performance.

Currently on the lookout for - RTX 3080. Still waiting for the prices to reach somewhat reasonable levels.
Post edited February 23, 2022 by idbeholdME
I'm fondly remembering trying to alter batch files to have colour games only start on a monochrome monitor ^^

Not sure about the home situation, also we had a builder we trust, at least my parents had. It worked good enough, though. One of my best memories must be the final level of command and conquer. 1 frame a second, maybe. The satellite strike must have at least lasted 30 mins!! But we, my buddie and me persevered.

out of the house it was a radeon something something, then a nvidia something something then a bold move and decided i needed to spend some dough ending up with a gtx 770. The gtx 770 stayed for quite some time. Then made a mistake which was partly due to situational hazards and bought a 1050Ti, soon to replace with a 1060 3gb which again was replaced with a rtx 2060 super.

The 2060super seems to be card i take most enjoyment out of. Partly due to the new techniques such as ray tracing and of course the upscaling possibilities. But the gtx 770 was pretty wild too. Also since it managed to raise my electricity bill with 50 euro's a month ;-)

With how things are developing atm i expect to transfer hopefully next year to a 4000 series nvidia card, possibly with a new psu, cables and such. If i can keep up this setting aside an x amount a month, i mean i'm almost willing to take an extra job to make that happen ;p
My last two laptops have been thinkpad workstation models with a decent mid-range gpus (more oriented toward designing than gaming I think, but they both have worked fine for gaming).

I also got a discrete GeForce GTX 1070 that I intended to use as a discrete card with my thunderbolt port in ~2018, but it was far from plug & play on Linux at that point and I was too busy with work to dedicate much of my time to hack a solution so it sat in a corner collecting dust for about a year until I got fed up and shelled out an extra 1k to have it installed on a windows desktop dedicated to gaming which I use to this day.

I also got some old aging ~8 years old clunkers with a lot of cpus and ram in ~2019 to work on some devops project at home. I noticed that 2 of them have gpus, but given that I use them as regular servers, I don't care much.

I have no idea what kind of graphics card I had before that.
Just thinking about them brings back memories.

1. NVIDIA GeFore4 MX440 (64MB) - 2002 the year when having a 64MB video card actually meant something :)

Best memories about it [Captain Claw, Chrome, Chrome SpecForce, GTA III, Vice City, San Andreas, NFS: Underground, Underground 2, Most Wanted (2005), SW KotOR I & II, WarCraft III + Original DotA Maps Mod] and many more, basically this card lasted me through my childhood.
Anyway by the time 2006 came the card was pretty obsolete. I remember it struggling so hard with games like Assassin's Creed, Mass Effect or Need for Speed Carbon, not to mention Crysis. :)

2. NVIDIA GeForce GT 540M (2GB) - 2011 - this is where I traded my only tower PC for a laptop and never looked back for a desktop.

Just to name a few games [Duke Nukem Forever, Mass Effect Trilogy, Need for Speed The Run, Syndicate (2012), The Witcher and The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings, Tomb Raider (2013)].

By 2016 it showed it's age, games like Dark Souls III or DOOM were pretty much unplayable on it.

3. AMD RX 540 (2GB) - 2018 - There comes a day when a gamer makes a poor choice when it comes to gaming hardware. Me buying an all AMD laptop was a poor choice. I am not a team blue/green/red fan, I buy the hardware that I think it best fits my needs at a good pricepoint, but that all team red was a real hassle to use. Bad driver support, lots of BSoDs for no reason, bad air flow that led to overheats from the very first month of buying it made me sent it back to warranty repairs more than once.
3 games I played until I gave up it [Death's Gambit, Salt and Sanctuary and The Witcher 3 GOTY]

NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1660Ti (6GB) - ASUS TUF Laptop Early 2020 - This is what the pandemic bought me - Being locked inside my house with my previous laptop was a no deal for me. After spending some time doing research on what I should buy, I settled for this one and it really came through for me. I lost count on how many games I played/replayed on it.

To name a few [Castlevania Lords of Shadow Trilogy, All Gears of War games, All Halo games, All Mass Effect games, Tomb Raider Legend Trilogy + Survivor Trilogy, All The Witcher games plus many more].

And that's it. This last laptop is still going strong and I bet it will still satisfy my gaming needs for atleast 3-5 years. Prolly will buy an RTX 6XXX next time :D.
Post edited February 23, 2022 by Naathir
Starting from the earliest discreet video card that I can remember:

S3 2MB version- cannot remember the exact designation, but was the standard video card around the mid 90's. As far as I know this is still running on my mom's sewing machine computer.

3dFx Voodoo- not just any Voodoo but the original first version Orchid Righteous with the mechanical relays that make that clicking noise when the card kicks in. Still remember I was halfway through Descent 2 and this transformed the experience. The single largest step in graphics I witnessed in gaming. I still have this one, it still works. This one belongs in a museum.

Riva TNT 16MB (Creative)- This is still working in an old Pentium 2 PC that I have connected to my CRT for DOS and early Win retro gaming.

GeForce 2- cannot remember the brand, it died after 2 years and is long gone.

GeForce something- maybe it was a Geforce 3 or whatever came next. It died after 2 years and is long gone.

Radeon 9800- was an awesome card for its time. Died after a few years.

Radeon HD19xx- i think it was a HD1910 but not sure of the designation. It was a long time WoW card until it died after about a few years. Long gone.

GeForce something- cannot remember the designation, but was whatever mid range around 2009-11. It died after 2 years. Long gone.

Radeon HD7770- Still have this and it's still operational but rarely used in a 32bit XP machine. Was a good stopgap during a period of very low PC gaming.

RX580- Still in my main PC and still going well into its 5th year, but I don;t play many demanding PC games these days. Got it really cheap- A$230 for a graphics card, imagine that now.
Post edited February 23, 2022 by CMOT70
Hm not sure i get every name right

Voodoo 3 3000 16MB. Flashed for Mac back then... Awesome. Still got it actually. For whatever reason ;)
Playing Unreal with it was perfect!

ATI Rage 128 - 16MB, used it to drive a secondary screen, together with the V3

ATI Radeon 6000 (?) 128mb i think... one of the few PCI upgrade cards available for Mac back then. First one that was able to run 2 screens at once... Played stuff like Warcraft 3 with it, Deus Ex... a few others, can't really remember, wasn't too much into gaming for several years, mostly because it was severely outdated.

(flashed) Radeon 9800 - That one died very quickly

ATI Radeon HD 2600XT (mobile)
Integrated card in my iMac back then... i played a lot of games with this one, Stalker, Bioshock... the first one it really couldn't run anymore was Witcher 2 if i remember right.

ATI (or AMD by then?) Radeon HD 5870 - 1GB
Came with my Mac Pro. Played through Witcher 3 with it, but that was the first game that needed some heavier tweaking... Still pretty decent card for everyday use.... until you look at the power consumption. 40W idling or something. Fits to my MP with 250W idling :D
Still use it in a secondary PC but not very often.

Currently:

(ASUS ROG STRIX) AMD Radeon 480 8GB, in the same old Mac Pro...
Still happy with this one, haven't played a game so far that didn't run decent (even Cyberpunk with the latest patch). Given the current prices i'll probably keep that one for a while longer...

Apple M1 - Mac mini, no dedicated VRAM
Amazingly fast for an integrated GPU, with a very low power consumption. This is my everyday, non-work computer... Deus Ex Mankind Divided and Metro Exodus both run fine on it. The 480 still beats it by a lot, so that's still my main gaming card.

Radeon 560X (or something)/work/Macbook Pro. Sucks. Slow, gets very hot.
Post edited February 24, 2022 by ignisferroque
Trident Microsystems 2MB PCI graphics card (~1999)(with Cyrix M2-333 cpu + 32 MB RAM) <--- My first PC :P side-stepping from my Amiga A1200 (68040+16MB)

Need for Speed lll: Hot Pursuit <--- Loved that game...

Cheap generic 8MB AGP graphics card (bought from a computer fair ~2000...) installed in the above system.

Nvidia TNT2 32MB AGP graphics card (AMD K6-ll cpu) (installed in same Socket 7 system above ~2002)

Nvidia Geforce 256 64MB DDR AGP

Nvidia Geforce FX 5200 128MB AGP

Nvidia Geforce 8800 GT 512MB DDR PCIe (Core2Quad Q6600 2.4Ghz + 4GB)

Then went to laptops for quite a number of years because of the cost and noise of self-built desktop systems.

Nvidia Geforce 1050Ti 4GB PCIe which I bought a couple of years ago and still currently use.
(I just read the OP and decided to add the games I played with these.)

The first GPU I was aware of was the Geforce 8800 GT, I believe. It was my introduction to what a GPU even was but I never got that one. I and my brother scrounged up birthday and Christmas money and in early 2008 we got an EVGA eGeforce 8500 GT. I still have it to this day, actually. I acquired a second one many years later from my grandfather who passed away and left some old office stuff and one of them had an 8500 in it. The EVGA I am pretty sure is fried, but the other one I use in certain builds to play old games. We upgraded to 2GB of RAM for the system along with the GPU. In 2008, that was pretty good.

8500: The games I remember enjoying on this system were mostly older but also included Battlefield 2, Rome Total War, Medieval II Total War (I install this on every computer I own), Far Cry demo, Call of Duty 4 Demo, Battle for Middle Earth 1 and 2 and Rise of the Witch-King, Empire at War, Age of Empires III, Empire Earth 2, Rise of Nations, Zoo Tycoon 2, GRID, and Medal of Honor Airborne. The last games I remember extensively with this card before the system became fritzy were Order of War and Men of War. I cannot say what specifically killed it off, but those are the ones I remember most with it near the end. GPUs seemed not to last very long to me at the time.

The next computer I received was an integrated Radeon system from HP. I could not say what the exact card was right now. The number 4200 is in there. It was actually a nice little compact but it developed problems to the point where Unreal Tournament played fine but it could not run Word at all and would eventually crash.

The main games I played on the 4200 system were: Unreal Tournament 1999 and 2004, STALKER: Call of Pripyat (lower settings), Quake II, Return to Castle Wolfenstein, Halo: Combat Evolved, Stonghold Collection, Quake IV (I recall it playing fine on higher settings), and Mount & Blade (the original). M&B was actually the first game I played on this system and it was some of the most fun I had on a PC. This system's problem game was Mount & Blade, but that was a couple of years into owning it.

The next one I received was a birthday present after being lent down my first hand me down office computer. It possessed a Core 2 Quad (I think a 9300) and was what I played games like the Witcher 1 and 2 on. That card was the GTX 650 from MSI. It was a near game changer because I had not played many newer PC games until I got my GOG account in December 2013/early 2014.

Games on the 650 system: Witcher 1 & 2, Two Worlds II, Metro 2033 & Last Light, Stalker (SoC, Clear Sky, and CoP), Men of War (Assault Squad, Viet Nam, and Red Tide), Shadow Warrior 2013, World in Conflict, Forces of Corruption, Company of Heroes (v.1.00, it has not disc check), Supreme Commander, Far Cry 2, Sins of a Solar Empire (also v.1.00 which also has no disc check), Mount & Blade: With Fire & Sword, Call of Duty: World at War, Timeshift, Oblivion, Rise of the Triad 2013, Torchlight (first game installed on the system), Sacred 2, and King's Bountry Crossworlds. The 650 still works, I just replaced it so I could play the Witcher III.

The next one I managed was when I was later in college in time to play the Witcher 3 in 2017 (I waited for the GotY edition). That card is still my primary one to this day and it is a Gygabyte GTX 1050ti. This is just a great card at 900p, the native resolution of my monitor, and it is an absolute beauty. (This system originally had a 650 in it starting in early 2016. The processor is an i3 4170.)

Games on the 1050ti system: Cysis 1 & Warhead, Dead Space, Dragon Age Origins, Hard Reset Redux, Shadow Warrior 2, Witcher 3, Mount & Blade Viking Conquest, Grim Dawn, Titan Quest, Sudden Strike 3 and 4, Torchlight II, Vikings Wolves of Mithgarth, Bioshock (the Humble Bundle version), Singularity, and Victory at Sea.

Later my brothers and I contributed towards a more powerful PC in late 2019 and the card we put into it was a Gygabyte GTX 1070. That is a really nice card but my interests in playing games that take advantage of it is unfortunately low enough where I only use it for a few games. This system contains an i3 9100F.

Games I played on the 1070: Greedfall, Deserts of Kharak, Kingdom Come: Deliverance, Metro Exodus, Steel Division II, Wargame: European Escalation, and Sleeping Dogs.

It occurred to me that I actually have a few other GPUs I can talk about. They are not "canon" if you will but here goes:

The nature of a relative's business changed so I got a few office computers with old i5 processors. I thought I would mess with them and threw a Radeon HD 7570 in there, or so I planned. I did not think about it when I ordered it but the case needed a low profile bracket thing (I do not know what it is called) for the GPU which it did not have. I have two of these cards and I could not tell you which one is which anymore, since I think I swapped the adapter at least once on them. Anyway, as you might have guessed, I bought a second one with the adapter because it was easier than just the adapter. These cards were pretty cheap in 2019, and I am using the word cheap intentionally. I know one of them went bust on me and not the system itself. But, no big deal, I just used the other one. Well then the system died but I think the card is fine... at least it's still in my desk. I have no real love for ATI Radeon or AMD cards after the poor experiences I have had with them across systems. These cards worked for such a brief time that the only game I recall with any fondness was Doom II, and I played that before I put them in.

So, later I was asked to get a graphics card for a family member and the only thing there that was affordable was a GT 710. Unfortunately, given the layout in the case the card actually did not fit and we upgraded other components to hopefully compensate performance. It seems fine, but I kept the 710 and replaced the red 8500 I was using in a build for older games. It works fine but, honestly, if it's better it's not perceptible. At least not enough to justify the price, if I was not stuck with it (the store also went out of business). That GPU has been largely used for older games like Medieval II Total War, Rome Total War, Men of War and Age of Empires III.
Post edited February 25, 2022 by AnimalMother117
Diamond Monster 3D (3dfx Voodoo 1)
The granddaddy of 3D acceleration

Diamond Viper V770 (nVidia Riva TNT 2)

Asus V8200 (nVidia Geforce 3 Ti200)

Sapphire Radeon 9550 Pro (ATI Radeon R300)

Elsa Geforce 7950 GX2 (nVidia Geforce 7)

HiS Radeon 5750 IceQ+ (ATI Radeon HD 5700)

Sapphire Radeon R9 290 (AMD Radeon R9 200 Series)

Sapphire Radeon RX 590 (AMD Radeon RX 500 Series)
Voodoo 3 (2000) - for my first PC
ATI 9700 (2003) - for new PC
Geforce 8800 (2008) - for new PC
Geforce 560 Ti (2011) - for new PC
Geforce 970 (2015) - upgrade for previous PC
Geforce 710 (2021) - bought in case 970 breaks since prices are what they are now
Post edited February 24, 2022 by Mika1
avatar
Mika1: Geforce 560 Ti (2011) - for new PC
Geforce 970 (2015) - upgrade for previous PC
Geforce 710 (2021) - bought in case 970 breaks since prices are what they are now
I'm assuming you disposed of the 560 Ti? I reckon you would get better performance from that than a 710...
3dfx Voodoo 3
Too many games to name. Tons of early 3D games.

nVidia GeForce 8600 GT (XFX)
Morrowind, Doom, Oblivion

nVidia GeForce 9800 GTX (PNY)
Skyrim... ish

nVidia GeForce GTX 660ti (EVGA)
The Witcher, The Witcher 2, Skyrim, Dark Souls

nVidia GeForce GTX 1080 (GIGABYTE)
Tons of games... got it for The Witcher 3, but I enjoyed DOOM (2016) on this one too.

nVidia GeForce RTX 3070 (EVGA)
Elden Ring, The Outer Worlds, Cyberpunk 2077, DOOM Eternal, Control.... tons and tons of games.
Post edited February 24, 2022 by paladin181