---
product_id: 27382088
title: "GeForce GTX 960 2GB SSC GAMING ACX 2.0+, Whisper Silent Cooling Graphics Card 02G-P4-2966-KR"
brand: "evga"
price: "344300CFA"
currency: XOF
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
category: "Evga"
url: https://www.desertcart.sn/products/27382088-geforce-gtx-960-2gb-ssc-gaming-acx-2-0-whisper
store_origin: SN
region: Senegal
---

# 1279 MHz base clock speed 1024 CUDA cores for smooth gaming Whisper silent dual-fan cooling GeForce GTX 960 2GB SSC GAMING ACX 2.0+, Whisper Silent Cooling Graphics Card 02G-P4-2966-KR

**Brand:** evga
**Price:** 344300CFA
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> 🎯 Elevate your 1080p game with silent power and sleek efficiency!

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** GeForce GTX 960 2GB SSC GAMING ACX 2.0+, Whisper Silent Cooling Graphics Card 02G-P4-2966-KR by evga
- **How much does it cost?** 344300CFA with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.sn](https://www.desertcart.sn/products/27382088-geforce-gtx-960-2gb-ssc-gaming-acx-2-0-whisper)

## Best For

- evga enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted evga brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Future-Ready Visuals:** Supports Dynamic Super Resolution & NVIDIA VXGI for stunning lighting effects
- • **Whisper-Quiet Cooling:** ACX 2.0+ tech with optimized heat pipes keeps temps low and noise minimal
- • **Power-Packed Performance:** Boost clock up to 1342 MHz for seamless 1080p gaming
- • **Plug & Play Compatibility:** PCI Express interface with DVI & HDMI outputs for easy setup
- • **Efficient Memory Bandwidth:** 2GB GDDR5 at 7010 MHz delivering 112.16 GB/s bandwidth

## Overview

The EVGA GeForce GTX 960 2GB SSC GAMING ACX 2.0+ is a mid-range graphics card engineered for professional-grade 1080p gaming. Featuring a 1279 MHz base clock (boosting to 1342 MHz), 1024 CUDA cores, and 2GB of high-speed GDDR5 memory at 7010 MHz, it delivers smooth frame rates with efficient power consumption. Its advanced ACX 2.0+ cooling system ensures whisper-quiet operation and optimal thermal management, while NVIDIA technologies like VXGI and Dynamic Super Resolution enhance visual fidelity. Ideal for gamers and professionals seeking reliable performance without compromise.

## Description

The EVGA GeForce GTX 960 delivers incredible performance, power efficiency, and gaming technologies that only NVIDIA Maxwell technology can offer. This is the perfect upgrade, offering 60% faster performance and twice the power efficiency of previous generation cards. Plus, it features vxgi for realistic lighting, support for smooth, tear free NVidia sync technology, and Dynamic super Resolution for 4K quality gaming on 1080P displays. The new EVGA Ace 2. 0 cooler brings new features to the award winning EVGA Ace 2. 0 cooling technology. A memory MOSFET cooling plate (mmcp) reduces MOSFET temperatures by 11 Degree, and optimized straight heat pipes (SHP) reduce GPU temperature by an additional 5 degree C. Acx 2. 0 coolers also feature optimized swept blades, double ball bearings and an extreme low power motor, delivering more air flow with less power, unlocking additional power for the GPU pared to GTX 660.

Review: The GTX 960: A good middle road graphics card. - This review is for both the GTX 960 2G and 4G as I have owned both. Overview: The most important thing you want to know is if this is a good card, whether it can run modern games at high settings, and will it last me a few years. The short version is: Yes this is a great card that can run most modern games at high to ultra settings with 45-60FPS at 1080p, however the 2G version is a terrible purchase for future proofing, so do yourself a favor, pay the extra $30 and get the 4G. More games are requiring 2.5-3G for high to ultra settings at 1080p, so 2G just isn't enough anymore. How it runs: Now the card runs perfectly, as Nvidia does a great job with the drivers. I have had a few crashes, but mostly due to overclocking and the occasional updated driver issues). The card overclocks relatively well and quite easily using EVGA's Precision X or MSI afterburner, however you will only see around a 2-6 FPS boost even at max overclock with air cooling, so it's really up to you if you would prefer to risk it. The fans are silent when idle, and very quiet under load, and since case fans are much louder in general, you will probably not notice them. How it performs: Before we discuss the card, here are some benchmarks for the GTX courtesy of Tom's Hardware: http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/nvidia-geforce-gtx-960,4038-4.html As you can tell from the benchmarks, the GTX 960 is very middle of the road and runs most games at high or ultra settings at 48-60FPS at 10180p, and that is what you expect from a $200-240 card. Price wise you could probably get more frames per dollar with an Radeon R9 280X, Which is slightly more powerful at a lower price, but comes with 3G instead of 4G, and features AMD's less than stellar drivers so it is a bit of a toss up. The better question is whether you should simply fork over $100 more dollars and get the significantly better GTX 970 (Which technically only has 3.5G), which will take much longer before requiring an upgrade. Warning: ATTENTION HP PAVILION USERS WITH DESKTOPS MADE IN 12012 OR EARLIER. These graphics card will not post on many of the older HP Pavilion desktops (Specifically the ones that still use the Chicago Motherboard) because the card is incompatible with their very outdated bios. I had to return the 960 2G card for that reason, and ended up building a new PC from scratch with the 960 4G.
Review: Good while it lasted. - I plugged one of these into my DX58SO2 with PCIE 2.0 to replace two aging 460GTX in SLI (This card's system requirements say "PCIE, PCIE 2.0, or PCIE 3.0"). I got one warning that the system failed to POST, but I hit reset and the PC booted normally. After installing the latest drivers from Nvidia and rebooting, I fired up FarCry 4 and bumped the graphics settings to the "very high" preset. I got about 55-70FPS, peaked the temp at about 50 Celsius, and yes..the monkeys even had fur. Totally satisfied with my purchase, I shut down the game after playing for an hour and was watching some TV and thinking about which game I should try next..... ....and then..... ....my PC instantly powered off with no warning or blue screen. I hit the power button and it tried to power on for about half a second, then it stopped responding to the power button completely. Quite upset, I ordered a new power supply, and days later, put it in the system. With a great feeling of dread, I pushed the power button.....nothing.....So it now seems that the motherboard is dead. It's about 7 months out of warranty too! Now I have to buy a new motherboard, and probably a new CPU, and new RAM to go with it All to compliment the new power supply and the seemingly awesome and inexpensive new GTX960 that I was so excited about. For the skeptics, the Power supply was more than sufficient, the case was very clean and well ventilated. The CPU has a tower cooler with heat pipes and a year old application of arctic silver. Nothing was overclocked. Now I'm not going to come right out and say that this card fried my motherboard. I'll leave the readers to decide if it was operator error or even pure coincidence that the flagship Intel motherboard died 1 hour after installing this. Your guess is as good as mine. All I know is the fuzzy warm feeling I had from buying a decent display adapter upgrade at a reasonable price wore off very quickly. Update: New Power Supply, Motherboard, Memory, CPU, on top of this video card...and I am finally back to gaming again. So far I see no issues with the GXT960 SSC so far. Certainly nothing like what happened before. The card runs very cool, as you can guess by all the Nvidia promotional material touting it's cooling ability. I have to assume this means you have lots of room to overclock, but given the way the last 2 weeks have gone for me..I won't be overclocking for the time being. I sort of wonder why it's not clocked higher by default though if it's generating so little heat that the fans can turn off completely. As far as performance goes, I can get a solid synced 60 fps with pretty high quality settings in just about every game I've tried. Maybe not "Ultra" in a very modern game, but a respectable "High". Minecraft on the other hand runs like a champ, even with the highest possible quality settings using Optifine HD Ultra and 8x MSAA and 8x transparancy antialiasing. I get 120 FPS if I turn off vsync, or I can turn it on and limit the FPS to 60 and the card only uses about 30% of the GPU. Watch Dogs runs great at around "High", and while you can go higher and get 60fps most of the time, it's better to lower the quality a bit to make sure the FPS doesn't ever drop below 60. It's really not fun trying to make a turn at 120mph and having a FPS lag spike mess with your timing. One of these GTX960 cards absolutely beats the two GTX460 cards running in SLi that I had before. I don't need benchmarks to tell you that, it is clearly obvious with the naked eye.

## Features

- EVGA "ACX 2. 0" cooling Technology - fine-tuned to perfection
- Base Clock: 1279 MHz/ Boost Clock: 1342 MHz
- Memory Clock: 7010 MHz Effective
- Cuda cores: 1024
- Memory Detail: 2048MB GDDR5
- Memory Bit width 128 Bit/ Memory Speed: 0. 28ns/ Memory bandwidth: 112. 16 GB/s
- Recommended PSU: 400W or greater power supply

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN | B00SL2TQ2C |
| Antenna Location | Gaming |
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,998 in Computer Graphics Cards |
| Brand | EVGA |
| Built-In Media | Graphics card, manuel, cables |
| Compatible Devices | Desktop |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 1,068 Reviews |
| Display Resolution Maximum | 4096x2160 |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00843368033583, 04250812407290, 08809321845862 |
| Graphics Card Interface | PCI Express |
| Graphics Card Ram | 2 GB |
| Graphics Coprocessor | Nvidia GeForce |
| Graphics Description | GeForce GTX 960 |
| Graphics Processor Manufacturer | NVIDIA |
| Graphics RAM Type | GDDR5 |
| Graphics Ram Size | 2 GB |
| Graphics Ram Type | GDDR5 |
| Item Weight | 1.5 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | EVGA |
| Memory Clock Speed | 7010 MHz |
| Mfr Part Number | 02G-P4-2966-KR |
| Model Name | 04G-P4-3962-KR |
| Model Number | 02G-P4-2966-KR |
| Number of Fans | 2 |
| UPC | 796594551966 809395323851 801947305773 843368033583 804904128729 808113008711 804067325294 792745285247 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Video Output Interface | DVI , HDMI |
| Video Processor | NVIDIA |
| Warranty Description | Limited warranty; 3 years warranty |

## Product Details

- **Brand:** EVGA
- **Graphics Coprocessor:** Nvidia GeForce
- **Graphics Processor Manufacturer:** NVIDIA
- **Graphics Ram Size:** 2 GB
- **Video Output Interface:** DVI, HDMI

## Images

![GeForce GTX 960 2GB SSC GAMING ACX 2.0+, Whisper Silent Cooling Graphics Card 02G-P4-2966-KR - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71xJdSrAPQL.jpg)
![GeForce GTX 960 2GB SSC GAMING ACX 2.0+, Whisper Silent Cooling Graphics Card 02G-P4-2966-KR - Image 2](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71L2mjHLYaL.jpg)
![GeForce GTX 960 2GB SSC GAMING ACX 2.0+, Whisper Silent Cooling Graphics Card 02G-P4-2966-KR - Image 3](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61Ja2tPEZGL.jpg)
![GeForce GTX 960 2GB SSC GAMING ACX 2.0+, Whisper Silent Cooling Graphics Card 02G-P4-2966-KR - Image 4](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71XcqnsX0IL.jpg)
![GeForce GTX 960 2GB SSC GAMING ACX 2.0+, Whisper Silent Cooling Graphics Card 02G-P4-2966-KR - Image 5](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71kJmcU99JL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ The GTX 960: A good middle road graphics card.
*by S***. on July 29, 2015*

This review is for both the GTX 960 2G and 4G as I have owned both. Overview: The most important thing you want to know is if this is a good card, whether it can run modern games at high settings, and will it last me a few years. The short version is: Yes this is a great card that can run most modern games at high to ultra settings with 45-60FPS at 1080p, however the 2G version is a terrible purchase for future proofing, so do yourself a favor, pay the extra $30 and get the 4G. More games are requiring 2.5-3G for high to ultra settings at 1080p, so 2G just isn't enough anymore. How it runs: Now the card runs perfectly, as Nvidia does a great job with the drivers. I have had a few crashes, but mostly due to overclocking and the occasional updated driver issues). The card overclocks relatively well and quite easily using EVGA's Precision X or MSI afterburner, however you will only see around a 2-6 FPS boost even at max overclock with air cooling, so it's really up to you if you would prefer to risk it. The fans are silent when idle, and very quiet under load, and since case fans are much louder in general, you will probably not notice them. How it performs: Before we discuss the card, here are some benchmarks for the GTX courtesy of Tom's Hardware: http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/nvidia-geforce-gtx-960,4038-4.html As you can tell from the benchmarks, the GTX 960 is very middle of the road and runs most games at high or ultra settings at 48-60FPS at 10180p, and that is what you expect from a $200-240 card. Price wise you could probably get more frames per dollar with an Radeon R9 280X, Which is slightly more powerful at a lower price, but comes with 3G instead of 4G, and features AMD's less than stellar drivers so it is a bit of a toss up. The better question is whether you should simply fork over $100 more dollars and get the significantly better GTX 970 (Which technically only has 3.5G), which will take much longer before requiring an upgrade. Warning: ATTENTION HP PAVILION USERS WITH DESKTOPS MADE IN 12012 OR EARLIER. These graphics card will not post on many of the older HP Pavilion desktops (Specifically the ones that still use the Chicago Motherboard) because the card is incompatible with their very outdated bios. I had to return the 960 2G card for that reason, and ended up building a new PC from scratch with the 960 4G.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Good while it lasted.
*by M***B on February 27, 2015*

I plugged one of these into my DX58SO2 with PCIE 2.0 to replace two aging 460GTX in SLI (This card's system requirements say "PCIE, PCIE 2.0, or PCIE 3.0"). I got one warning that the system failed to POST, but I hit reset and the PC booted normally. After installing the latest drivers from Nvidia and rebooting, I fired up FarCry 4 and bumped the graphics settings to the "very high" preset. I got about 55-70FPS, peaked the temp at about 50 Celsius, and yes..the monkeys even had fur. Totally satisfied with my purchase, I shut down the game after playing for an hour and was watching some TV and thinking about which game I should try next..... ....and then..... ....my PC instantly powered off with no warning or blue screen. I hit the power button and it tried to power on for about half a second, then it stopped responding to the power button completely. Quite upset, I ordered a new power supply, and days later, put it in the system. With a great feeling of dread, I pushed the power button.....nothing.....So it now seems that the motherboard is dead. It's about 7 months out of warranty too! Now I have to buy a new motherboard, and probably a new CPU, and new RAM to go with it All to compliment the new power supply and the seemingly awesome and inexpensive new GTX960 that I was so excited about. For the skeptics, the Power supply was more than sufficient, the case was very clean and well ventilated. The CPU has a tower cooler with heat pipes and a year old application of arctic silver. Nothing was overclocked. Now I'm not going to come right out and say that this card fried my motherboard. I'll leave the readers to decide if it was operator error or even pure coincidence that the flagship Intel motherboard died 1 hour after installing this. Your guess is as good as mine. All I know is the fuzzy warm feeling I had from buying a decent display adapter upgrade at a reasonable price wore off very quickly. Update: New Power Supply, Motherboard, Memory, CPU, on top of this video card...and I am finally back to gaming again. So far I see no issues with the GXT960 SSC so far. Certainly nothing like what happened before. The card runs very cool, as you can guess by all the Nvidia promotional material touting it's cooling ability. I have to assume this means you have lots of room to overclock, but given the way the last 2 weeks have gone for me..I won't be overclocking for the time being. I sort of wonder why it's not clocked higher by default though if it's generating so little heat that the fans can turn off completely. As far as performance goes, I can get a solid synced 60 fps with pretty high quality settings in just about every game I've tried. Maybe not "Ultra" in a very modern game, but a respectable "High". Minecraft on the other hand runs like a champ, even with the highest possible quality settings using Optifine HD Ultra and 8x MSAA and 8x transparancy antialiasing. I get 120 FPS if I turn off vsync, or I can turn it on and limit the FPS to 60 and the card only uses about 30% of the GPU. Watch Dogs runs great at around "High", and while you can go higher and get 60fps most of the time, it's better to lower the quality a bit to make sure the FPS doesn't ever drop below 60. It's really not fun trying to make a turn at 120mph and having a FPS lag spike mess with your timing. One of these GTX960 cards absolutely beats the two GTX460 cards running in SLi that I had before. I don't need benchmarks to tell you that, it is clearly obvious with the naked eye.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Great Mid-Range Gaming Card, Benchmark FPS' In Review!
*by M***H on September 11, 2015*

Purchased for my first ever desktop computer custom build, designed for heavy gaming, but without blowing the bank account to smithereens, this graphics card really hit the right spot for me. To start with, I chose NVIDIA over AMD for two main reasons: 1 - AMD cards ALWAYS require more power, and use more power (substantially more) than the comparable NVIDIA cards (for example, this card will draw about 108 Watts in a gaming scenario, whereas the comparable AMD Radeon R9 285 in a comparable gaming scenario will draw about 176 Watts). No, this difference isn't going to destroy an electric bill, but over time, it would add up, making the AMD card more expensive in the long run. 2 - AMD cards typically run hotter than the comparable NVIDIA cards as well, not as much of a difference here, but I preferred to play it safe. Now why I chose the EVGA model? It didn't come down to much, just really chose something I figured would be solid. I really liked that this card had a backplate, as well as so many connectivity options. I also purchased the Super SuperClocked version, giving this card the biggest possible advantage for it being a 960, and EVGA's overclocking software is fairly convenient to use, especially when you're using one of their cards. On to actual thoughts: I really like this card. I had really high hopes for how it would perform, and it holds up to most of those. You won't be playing Dying Light or The Witcher III: Wild Hunt on completely maxed Ultra settings, that I can guarantee you. But it does stand up very well to modern titles and is completely capable of playing anything on the market right now, at varying qualities, but it can play most titles around about one step down from Ultra. It runs fairly cool, I need to rework my fan setup and some other cooling things in my case, but it does cool itself just fine, no worry of thermal bottlenecking. I was surprised by the weight when I got it out of the package, not to mention the size, this card is hefty to say the least. The coating is a matte finished black with some decals, and the backplate is a glossy black (nice feature by the way). The connection ports all come with black port blockers to keep dust and debris from causing connectivity issues, and it also comes with a power cable adapter, which most people will need to use, and it comes with a DVI to VGA adapter, so this can literally use nearly every display connection type there is, granted there is a clear bias towards Display Port with 3 of them being included. The card fit just fine in my Zalman Z11 Plus case, and works well with my ASUS Z97-A motherboard. ====================================================================================================== I will include game benchmarks scores for my rig with this graphics card in it: My Rig: Intel i5-4690K EVGA SSC NVIDIA GTX 960 4GB ASUS Z97-A 8GB DDR3 Corsair CX600M PSU Windows 10 Pro BioShock Infinite: Ultra ~ Maxed Settings - AVERAGE: 72 MINIMUM: 26 MAXIMUM: 117 Tomb Raider (2013): Ultra Preset - AVERAGE: 86 MINIMUM: 70 MAXIMUM: 102 Hitman: Absolution: Ultra Preset w/ MSAA OFF - AVERAGE: 70 MINIMUM: 58 MAXIMUM: 82 Thief: High Preset - AVERAGE: 60 MINIMUM: 49 MAXIMUM: 78 Middle Earth: Shadow of Mordor: Very High Preset - AVERAGE: 64 MINIMUM: 46 MAXIMUM: 90 ARMA 2: ALL Settings on High - Benchmark 1 AVERAGE: 60 Benchmark 2 AVERAGE: 24 Metro 2033 Redux: High Preset w/ Tesselation on High, Texture Filtering on AF 16X, SSAA OFF, Advanced PhysX OFF - AVERAGE: 71 MINIMUM: 21 MAXIMUM: 222 Metro: Last Light: High Preset w/ Tesselation on High, SSAA OFF, Advanced PhysX OFF - AVERAGE: 69 MINIMUM: 22 MAXIMUM: 153 S.T.A.L.K.E.R.: Call of Pripyat: Extreme Preset - Day AVERAGE: 67 Day MINIMUM: 35 Day MAXIMUM: 99 Night AVERAGE: 72 Night MINIMUM: 44 Night MAXIMUM: 102 Rain AVERAGE: 76 Rain MINIMUM: 53 Rain MAXIMUM: 111 Sun-shafts AVERAGE: 51 Sun-shafts MINIMUM: 35 Sun-shafts MAXIMUM: 73 Just Cause 2: ALL Settings Maxed - The Dark Tower AVERAGE: 69 Desert Sunrise AVERAGE: 77 Concrete Jungle AVERAGE: 64 Far Cry 2: Ultra High Preset - Ranch - Long Benchmark AVERAGE: 117 MINIMUM: 66 MAXIMUM: 253 Sleeping Dogs: High Preset w/ NO HD Texture Pack - AVERAGE: 58 MINIMUM: 46 MAXIMUM: 63

## Frequently Bought Together

- EVGA GeForce GTX 960 2GB SSC GAMING ACX 2.0+, Whisper Silent Cooling Graphics Card 02G-P4-2966-KR
- Thermaltake Smart 500W 80+ White Certified PSU, Continuous Power with 120mm Ultra Quiet Cooling Fan, ATX 12V V2.3/EPS 12V Active PFC Power Supply PS-SPD-0500NPCWUS-W
- Crucial Pro 32GB DDR4 RAM Kit (2x16GB), High-Performance 3200MHz (or 3000MHz or 2666MHz) Desktop Memory UDIMM 288-Pin, Compatible with Intel and AMD Ryzen - CP2K16G4DFRA32A

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*Product available on Desertcart Senegal*
*Store origin: SN*
*Last updated: 2026-05-19*