It'll be decent, it's the best Xonar for less than 100$ after all. (It also shares the same audio chip as their top of the line cards, the STX).Yeah, thanks for the input guys as this helped me as well. I've been looking at this card:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16829132006
What do you think? Decent for money?
SupremeFX III built-in 8-Channel High Definition Audio CODEC
- Output Signal-to-Noise Ratio (A-Weighted): 110 dB
- Output THD+N at 1kHz: 95 dB
- Supports : Jack-detection, Multi-streaming, Front Panel Jack-retasking
Audio Feature :
- SupremeFX Shielding™ Technology
- 1500 uF Audio Power Capacitor
- Gold-plated jacks
- X-Fi® Xtreme Fidelity™
- EAX® Advanced™ HD 5.0
- THX® TruStudio PRO™
- Creative ALchemy
- Blu-ray audio layer Content Protection
- Optical S/PDIF out port(s) at back panel
A soundcard is always better than onboard audio, though you'll only hear the difference if your speaker system is good too.Hrm.. This has me thinking again.. I just put the ASUS Rampage IV Formula in my new system. The on-board sound is pretty amazing compared to my old board. Would I get much of a worthwhile improvement going up to something like the Xonar DX 7.1?
Stats on the rampage:
Yeah it'll be an improvement, though you literally pay for what you get; I suggest you save your money and rather get this http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16829132054Using sennheiser pc360s.
Using sennheiser pc360s.