Yeah, that's actually an excellent point. You can install this card into cheap prebuilt computers with crappy power supplies without overloading the PSU. That's a critical point for many people--maybe I'll recommend it to a friend.

[Image: http://i.imgur.com/N6yY6xb.png]

A computer with a crappy 300W power supply should be able to handle a GTX 750 (load would be even lower, as the graph includes total power consumption on a system with a Intel Core i7-4960X CPU... lol) I'd never risk putting a R7 260 in there.

Admittedly, I didn't look into this card in depth, as I'm not interested in low-end stuff. But its design is actually quite impressive in that NVIDIA took a mobile graphics chip architecture, which has been optimized for efficiency, and scaled it up to boost performance. This produces superior design when it comes to efficiency at the low end, as opposed to the traditional "half-assed" method where they take a high-powered design and scale it down for the low-end. So, gotta give credit where it's due--NVIDIA doesn't deserve this often.

Still, if you're custom building a PC, then you can easily support a R7 260, which would give you quite a bit more performance for the same cost.