When i do some quick research and look at prices I tend to agree, but being out of the loop and not following video cards (and the utter sheet way of naming they use) its easy to assume im wrong and felt some better heads might sway me.
I think I will wait yet another year.. I had been on about a 2 year upgrade cycle, but this set (bought when they cost way to much) has performed quit well and maybe can stretch it a bit more.
thanks for pretty much confirming my thoughts and for the suggestions, something to read up and maybe, who knows, change my mind.
For me, the 1GB of VRAM can really be felt.
In games like Skyrim where I have a bunch of mods running, I get like 22 FPS.
In games like Planetside 2, Crossfire doesn't scale very well at all and I barely get 30, dropping frequently to 25.
I also can't use my Quadro FX 4600 lying around as a Physx card because I don't have space in my case after having my 2 5870's in there.
SoftTH doesn't work with Crossfire, so when I'm playing with 3 monitors, it is running off one card.
Crysis 3 doesnt' scale well at all and I get like 20 FPS with everything maxed out and like 28 FPS with everything at minimum.
Bioshock Infinite stutters with my 2 5870's.
I can sell one of my 5870's for $150, and give the other one to my dad, who wants a better GFX card than his Quadro FX 3500.
I can buy an ASUS Radeon 7970 DirectCU II for $347.49 after rebate and tax (free shipping).
For most other games at 1080P though, it works well.
I've been thinking of upgrading mainly because I know the 9970 won't be as good as the 7970 price/performance wise when it just launches. I also have a feeling that AMD is going to do what the 7xx series an the Titan did; add a new price point highest-end GPU's instead of completely replacing the older generation, sort of like with the FX 9590.
All in all, I'm on the same boat as you; with probably a couple more incentives to upgrade. I also probably can't stand waiting a year longer for the 9xxx series price to drop.