Transparency AA Performance

For our Transparency AA testing, we ran through the AT_Canals_08-rev7 timedemo in Half Life 2. This demo has quite a few fences, and we wanted to test NVIDIA's claim that graphical quality is indeed improved significantly. Our performance tests show that MSAA comes at a marginal performance hit to overall framerate, while SSAA consumes quite a bit of our performance.

GeForce 7800 GTX AA Test


In order to illustrate the effect of the new AA mode, we took screenshots of a tell tale frame from our demo run. The screenshot shows very clearly that SSAA provides quite a quality improvement over no AA. MSAA ends up not looking worth the investment.


No Transparency AA



MS Transparency AA



SS Transparency AA


Below we have prepared some mouse overs to demonstrate the difference between the various levels of Transparency Anti Aliasing. Put your mouse over the first image to see the difference betweeen no Transparency AA and SSAA. The second image compares no AA with MSAA and the final image compares SSAA to MSAA.


No Transparency AA versus SSAA



No Transparency AA versus MSAA



SSAA versus MSAA


The difference between no Transparency AA and MSAA is very small. Only with a difference map are we even able to distinguish between the two. However, the difference between MSAA and SSAA is very pronounced.
Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory Performance Power Consumption
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  • VIAN - Wednesday, June 22, 2005 - link

    "NVIDIA sees texture bandwidth as outweighing color and z bandwidth in the not too distant future." That was a quote from the article after saying that Nvidia was focusing less on Memory Bandwidth.

    Do these two statements not match or is there something I'm not aware of.
  • obeseotron - Wednesday, June 22, 2005 - link

    These benchmarks are pretty clearly rushed out and wrong, or at least improperly attributed to the wrong hardware. SLI 6800 show up faster than SLI 7800's in many benchmarks, in some cases much more than doubling single 6800 scores. I understand NDAs suck with the limited amount of time to produce a review, but I'd rather it have not been posted until the afternoon than ignore the benchmarks section.
  • IronChefMoto - Wednesday, June 22, 2005 - link

    #28 -- Mlittl3 can't pronounce Penske or terran properly, and he's giving out grammar advice? Sad. ;)
  • SDA - Wednesday, June 22, 2005 - link

    QUESTION

    Okay, allcaps=obnoxious. But I do have a question. How was system power consumption measured? That is, was the draw of the computer at the wall measured, or was the draw on the PSU measured? In other words, did you measure how much power the PSU drew from the wall or how much power the components drew from the PSU?
  • Aikouka - Wednesday, June 22, 2005 - link

    Wow, I'm simply amazed. I said to someone as soon as I saw this "Wow, now I feel bad that I just bought a 6800GT ... but at least they won't be available for 1 or 2 months." Then I look and see that retailers already have them! I was shocked to say the least.
  • RyDogg1 - Wednesday, June 22, 2005 - link

    But my question was "who," was buying them. I'm a hardware goon as much as the next guy, but everyone knows that in 6-12 months, the next gen is out and price is lower on these. I mean the benches are presenting comparisons with cards that according to the article are close to a year old. Obviously some sucker lays down the cash because the "premium," price is way too high for a common consumer.

    Maybe this one of the factors that will lead to the Xbox360/PS3 becoming the new gaming standard as opposed to the Video Card market pushing the envelope.
  • geekfool - Wednesday, June 22, 2005 - link

    What no Crossfire benchies? I guess they didn't wany Nvidia to loose on their big launch day.
  • Lonyo - Wednesday, June 22, 2005 - link

    The initial 6800U's cost lots because of price gouging.
    They were in very limited supply, so people hiked up the prices.
    The MSRP of these cards is $600, and they are available.
    MSRP of the 6800U's was $500, the sellers then inflated prices.
  • Lifted - Wednesday, June 22, 2005 - link

    #24: In the Wolfenstein graph they obviously reversed the 7800 GTX SLI with the Radeon.

    They only reveresed a couple of labels here and there, chill out. It's still VERY OBVIOUS which card is which just by looking at the performance!

    WAKE UP SLEEPY HEADS.
  • mlittl3 - Wednesday, June 22, 2005 - link

    Derek,

    I know this article must have been rushed out but it needs EXTREME proofreading. As many have said in the other comments above, the results need to be carefully gone over to get the right numbers in the right place.

    There is no way that the ATI card can go from just under 75 fps at 1600x1200 to over 100 fps at 2048x1535 in Enemy Territory.

    Also, the Final Words heading is part of the paragraph text instead of a bold heading above it.

    There are other grammatical errors too but those aren't as important as the erroneous data. Plus, a little analysis of each of the benchmark results for each game would be nice but not necessary.

    Please go over each graph and make sure the numbers are right.

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