Another "deal:"
EVGA 950 GTX 2 GB + Free Game $90 AR
At Newegg. You get the voucher for either Dead by Daylight or Hard Reset Redux
Again, don't know anything about GFX cards or VRAM, but this could be a decent budget card.
PC World review on 2GB GTX 950:
http://www.pcworld.com/article/2973512/components-graphics/nvidia-geforce-gtx-950-review-bringing-more-oomph-to-budget-gaming-pcs.html
By comparison, many games on the Xbox One and PlayStation 4 struggle to hit 30fps at 1080p—and that's typically with lower graphics fidelity than the High settings in PC titles!
You'll need to step up to a $200 GTX 960 or R9 380 if you want to consistently enable Ultra graphics or hit 60fps in most games at 1080p, however.
Bottom line: The Nvidia GeForce GTX 950 delivers a nice 1080p gaming experience at a price that won’t break your budget. Nvidia has a clear winner here.
EDIT:
Not bad for $90 from retail for a 900p/1080p card for 30FPS/60FPS (depends per game) aiming for "Normal" settings on new games, TBH. Surely, this beats the $150 launch price it had.
The thing MysterD worries about is the lack of VRAM - it only has 2GB worth of it. If there was more (i.e. like say 3GB, 3.5GB, or even 4GB), MysterD would say it's a great deal for a budget card. The lack of VRAM here in 950 with only 2GB will give you less wiggle room for higher textures + settings.
Let's face it: some games just are poor ports, got too much going on, are huge-open worlds, and/or are VRAM hogs no matter what anyways - so you might want more VRAM straight-up. There are other games that will go over that 2GB easy at Higher settings @ 1080p.
But, if you're buying this card - you're likely going for 1080p 30FPS/60FPS (depends per game) and aren't aiming to Very High to Ultra on new stuff; though you might get that on a little bit older games (i.e. Bioshock Infinite). If you don't mind 900p - or hell, 720p if you're happy with that - I'd bet you could go with a lower-resolution (than 1080p) + are fine with that, then do it just so you could boost performance w/ more frames and/or boost-up some settings/details. Anyone looking to go for any of that route - sounds like it'll do fine for you.
For anyone on a budget and a "for now" band-aid, seems like it'll do okay for you...for now. Even more so true, if you like to use programs limit + cap framerates (i.e. MSI Afterburner); programs to suspend off programs/services running in the background (i.e. GameBooster or Razer Cortex, anyone?); and are okay with "Normal" settings in newer games. Tweak the most out of your games + system, if you possibly can, you know?
Anyone wanting real future in your card (i.e. you might want 1440p or above) and want to jump in the mid-range and/or enthusiast club - eh, you might want to go after a 6GB GTX 1060, 8GB GTX 1070, or above. Those will likely have some longevity to them.