Battlefield 2 Performance

This benchmark is performed using DICE's built in demo playback functionality with a few added extras built in house. When using the built in demo playback features of BF2, frames rendered during the loading screen are counted in the benchmark. In order to get a real idea of performance, we use the instantaneous frametime and frames per second data generated from a benchmark run. We discard the data collected during the loading screen and calculate a result that represents the actual gameplay that was benchmarked. While DICE maintains that results over 100fps aren't reliable, our methods have allowed us to get useful data from high performing systems.

During the benchmark, the camera switches between players and vehicles in order to capture the most action possible. There is a lot of smoke and explosions, so this is a very GPU intensive Battlefield 2 benchmark. The game itself is best experienced with average in-game framerates of 35 and up.

We ran Battlefield 2 using the highest quality graphics settings we could. Shadows, lighting, and especially view distance are very important in order to best play the game. In our opinion view distance should never be set to less than the max, but other settings can be decreased slightly if a little more performance or a higher resolution is required.

Battlefield 2

At the very top of the charts the GeForce 7900 GTX SLI manages to maintain just under a 12% advantage over the X1950 CrossFire, indicating to NVIDIA that it may not need to even respond with a new product to combat ATI's launch today at the high end. A single 7950 GX2 offers virtually identical performance to the X1950 CrossFire, showcasing the main strength of the 7950 GX2: its ability to offer dual card performance in a single slot in any platform. The performance advantage the X1950 CrossFire offers over its X1900 predecessor is 6%, definitely not enough to warrant an upgrade.

Single card performance is representative of what we've seen with multi-GPU performance, with the single 7900 GTX outperforming a single X1950 XTX. Note that the 7900 GTX's performance advantage actually grows from one to two cards, thanks to better scaling with NVIDIA's SLI architecture over ATI's CrossFire.

At the very bottom of the chart we've got the X1900 XT 256MB which really puts things into perspective. Being able to deliver 60 fps at 2048 x 1536 itself, most users will be monitor limited before they are GPU limited in games like Battlefield 2; in which case, the clear recommendation here is the $280 X1900 XT (or the similarly priced factory overclocked 7900 GT as we saw earlier in this review).

Although the 7900 GTX SLI performs better at higher resolutions, ATI's X1950 and X1900 CrossFire setups actually perform better at lower, more CPU bound resolutions, indicating greater driver overhead with NVIDIA's SLI. CPU limitations are quite evident at lower resolutions with the multi-GPU setups further reinforcing the idea that if you've got a LCD with a 1280 x 1024 maximum resolution, then you may want to think twice about upgrading to a second GPU.

The CPU limitations seen at 1280 x 1024 start to fade away as we move to 1600 x 1200, where the multi-GPU pack separates itself from the single GPU cards. What's interesting is that, with the exception of NVIDIA's 7900 GTX SLI, the remaining multi-GPU cards have similar resolution scaling curves to the single cards, just at higher frame rates.

Battlefield 2

When AA gets kicked on, we see the numbers get shaken up a bit. X1950 CrossFire essentially ties 7900 GTX SLI for the performance lead, and the 7950 GX2 drops to the bottom of the multi-GPU pile. Single GPU performance becomes dominated by ATI cards with the 7900 GTX falling to nearly the level of the 256MB X1900 XT. At the same time, it is a nice treat to realize that even the 256MB X1900 XT is playable at 2048x1536 with all the eye candy cranked up.

Our scaling graph doesn't show the same CPU limitedness we saw without AA enabled. The 7900 GTX SLI does see a hint of performance loss due to driver overhead here as well, but otherwise all these cards scale similarly as in the previous test.

A Faster, Cheaper High-End Black & White 2 Performance
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  • TigerFlash - Wednesday, August 23, 2006 - link

    I suppose I worded that the opposite way. Do you think Intel will stop supporting Crossfire cards?
  • michal1980 - Wednesday, August 23, 2006 - link

    Can we not even get any numbers for cards below the 7900GTX.

    I understand your limited, but how about some numbers from some cards below that, to see what an upgrade would do.

    I know we can kind of take test from old reviews of the cards, but your test bed has changed since core 2, so its not a fair heads to heads test of old numbers to new.

    it would be nice to see if theres a point(wise or not) to upgrade from a 7800gt or that gen of cards, or something slower like a 7900gt.

    but it seems like ever 'new gen' card test just drops off 'older' cards
  • michal1980 - Wednesday, August 23, 2006 - link

    what i meant is that on the tables, or where all the new cards are, it would be nice to have some numbers for old cards.
  • Lifted - Wednesday, August 23, 2006 - link

    Agreed. I'm still running a 6800GT and have not seen much of a reason to upgrade with the current software I run. Perhaps if I saw that newer games are 3x faster I might consider an upgrade, so how about it?

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