id say gtx 670 m in sli...ive had 2 x 470's in sli and 670's in sli, and i have not had a single issue. no microstuter, nothing. more performance, so thats what id go for.
why would I play at 40fps running 2 x 470's or 670's in sli? 1080p 60Hz..60fps all day rare dipps, vsynce on, smooth as butter for years now. if im lucky then great, but I don't think im one of few people who don't have thins problem. is micro stutter that common, cuz the last ive seen it was with my 4890, switched to gtx 260 core 216, stutter went away, and have been with NVidia since, over 4 years. (have had 470's and 670's in sli) still, id go with the sli set up if I had the opportunity, with the 670m for the OP.
Theres just some things a single card cannot do.
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/battlefield-3-graphics-performance,3063-7.htmlHonestly? If you have your sights set on 2560x1600, you probably want an SLI-based configuration. Even the GeForce GTX 590 gets beat up pretty badly at that resolution.
6... I see you gus talkig as if the op was askong about desktop graphics cards but the ops asked about the 670mx??? Which is a laptop gpu.
3D gaming, high resolution gaming and so on. Pretty obvious actually.
On BF3
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/battlefield-3-graphics-performance,3063-7.html
I think most cards can do 3d gaming, my 680 certainly can, it can also handle 1920x1080, which is the highest more or less all monitors can do at the moment, so not obvious at all. I find it strange that basically all the people i have known in real life whom have had multi-card configuration hated them and had problems, but then people i have never met on the internet talk about how wonderful it is. I have no agenda, i want sli and crossfire to work soooo much, but i always get burnt, if i thought they worked i would buy another 680 right this very second. I just know that i would be on the road to driver issues and more frame per second, but it would look to my eyes like i was only getting half the frames that i was getting with a single card.
The general theory is that micro stuttering occurs because video cards are forced to share data across the relatively slow PCI-Express bus instead of between their own high-bandwidth connections.
I think most cards can do 3d gaming, my 680 certainly can, it can also handle 1920x1080, which is the highest more or less all monitors can do at the moment, so not obvious at all.