I agree with what others have said, better to wait and see.
Looking at your specs though, that graphics card does stand out as the weakest link, compared to the other components, followed by the non-overclocked CPU. (SSD's can make a noticeable difference in loading times, but you'd still have to put their benefits behind what faster video-cards and CPU's can bring when comparing them all against each other.)
Overclocking is still a bit of a hit and miss affair, and you can still get right down into the finer points of it, but nowadays the motherboard manufacturers have made it a much more mainstream and accessible process. You could literally just change three settings in your bios and pretty much be guaranteed to get your CPU running at a stable mid 3.XX GHz, using any of several decent non-stock CPU coolers. Whether that would make a noticeable difference in your actual frame-rates though, who knows?
Not saying you should, but IMO if you did overclock that CPU and get something like a GTX580, at least you could turn around and say it's the game itself that's causing any performance problems, as you'd have taken the hardware side of it almost as far as it can can be taken at the moment. The only down side is, even with that system you probably will in fact still be getting software-limited frame-rates, depending on your in-game settings, but that's not the point.
Edit- Just saw your post about the 590. In my opinion the 590 won't bring down the prices of the 580's as much as it could have. From the reviews I've seen the 590's are a bit of a letdown. And while I know it's not the most economical of choices, I think getting a 580 now is a good move. It's still the fastest single-GPU nVidia card (can't remember if it beats its ATI equivalent or not) and it will be for some time yet, at least until late this year or early next year when the new generation of nVidia cards are due, and even then it should still be in the same ball-park (going by the usual incremental performance increases between generations.) If you got that 260 when it was still fairly new and you kept it this long (2 years?), you could do the same with a 560-580 bought now.
Just food for thought, the over-riding response still is, wait and see how they patch up CloDo and if it reveals any particular hardware-curable quirks. Not having a clear up-grade path to ensure the game runs as well as it could puts a damper on the whole up-grade idea imo. You'd have to have other reasons to do it at the moment.
Last edited by Les; 03-30-2011 at 08:06 PM.
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