Medium Detail Gaming Comparison

We’re going to focus on the main gaming target for this level of hardware: our Medium presets. The Low preset tends to look pretty lousy in several of the games (StarCraft II being the worst), while our High settings are too much for the GT 540M/HD 6630M in about half of the titles, even at 1366x768. Medium detail on the other hand should give us 30+ FPS in nearly all of the games we’re testing while still providing decent visuals. Here are the results.

Battlefield: Bad Company 2

Civilization V

DiRT 2

Left 4 Dead 2

Mafia II

Mass Effect 2

Metro 2033

STALKER: Call of Pripyat

StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty

Total War: Shogun 2

In terms of performance, the 6630M matches up nicely against the GT 540M. It wins a few games by a small margin, loses a few by a similarly small margin, and ties in the remainder. If we were just looking at gaming performance, there’s not much to discuss here. NVIDIA still has CUDA and PhysX, and AMD has their Accelerated Parallel Processing SDK, but given the level of performance we’re talking about, you won’t need or use these extras most of the time. Unfortunately for AMD, it’s not just about gaming performance.

We tested ten games (though we don’t have results from the Alienware M11x R3 in Civilization V and Total War: Shogun 2), and the newest titles are Civ5 (13 months old) and TWS2 (6 months old). You’d hope that with relatively known games, compatibility wouldn’t be an issue, but we ran into two problems during testing.

The first wasn’t a consistent problem, but we did have a couple of crash to desktop issues when benchmarking DiRT 2 using Dynamic Switchable Graphics mode. The other issue was a lot worse, and it was in StarCraft II when running at anything more than the Low default settings. As noted earlier, SC2 looks pretty lousy at its minimum settings, and Medium detail (and possibly even High) should be more than playable on the HD 6630M. In dynamic mode, however, not only was performance quite a bit lower than expected at our Low settings, but at Medium and above there were tons of missing textures. The solution is to switch to manually controlled switching, which solved both the performance and rendering errors, but then why even have dynamic switching in the first place?

While we’re on the subject, let’s also take a look at a few other comparisons. Running “stock” on the CPU, the Acer 3830TG is slightly slower overall than when using ThrottleStop to limit the CPU to 2.1GHz. With ThrottleStop, the average score across ten games improves by 20%, so the CPU throttling has a major impact in games. Civ5, ME2, and TWS2 show the least difference, with Mass Effect 2 being the only game that ran slightly faster at the stock CPU settings; Mafia 2 runs 10% faster, Metro 2033 and STALKRE are 13% faster, L4D2 jumps up 28%, DiRT2 is 49% faster, and the ever-CPU-limited StarCraft II runs 58% faster. Interesting to point out is that 2.1GHz is 75% higher than 1.2GHz, so on average it looks like the 3830TG runs around 1.3GHz in StarCraft II.

Flipping over to the other GT 540M equipped laptops and using the best result from the Acer 3830TG, the Alienware M11x R3 averages out to 3.5% faster, but it only has a clear lead in two games (DiRT2 and SC2) while it’s slightly slower in L4D2 and Mafia2. The Dell XPS 15 comes in 9% faster than the 3830TG on average, with the biggest lead again coming from SC2; Mafia2 once again gives the 3830TG a lead, so the latest NVIDIA drivers appear to be playing a role.

Finally, since we now have results from the HD 6630M with a Llano A8-3500M as well as the i5-2410M, we thought it would be interesting to see just how much performance you give up by gaming with the slower Llano CPU. If you’ll recall, in our first look at a Llano notebook, we expressed concern that the CPU would hold back GPU performance. Out of our ten tested titles, only Mass Effect 2 ran faster on Llano with a dGPU. Most games (at Medium settings where the GPU becomes more of a bottleneck) are close: BFBC2 and Civ5 are exactly the same performance, Mafia 2 is 2% faster with the Intel CPU, and Dirt2, L4D2, Metro, and STALKER are all within 5-10%. Not surprisingly, StarCraft II is the big outlier, running over twice as fast on the Intel i5-2410M. We’re still not looking at similar driver builds, as the Llano laptop is running a Catalyst 11.6 derivative (8.862.110607a-120249E) compared to 11.1 on the Sony, but even so the average performance increase with an Intel CPU comes in at 12% (mostly thanks to SC2).

Since there were two games where we didn’t have a perfect experience, we decided to look at some more recent titles.

How AMD’s Dynamic Switchable Graphics Works What about Recent Games?
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  • Filiprino - Tuesday, September 20, 2011 - link

    Huh... Sony sucks big on graphics driver section. Better forget their radeon card and OpenCL support?
  • 86waterpumper - Tuesday, September 20, 2011 - link

    The amd LLano solution is totally worthless as far as I'm concerned until they release some laptops with smaller sizes. If I am going to buy a honking monster laptop I'm not going to power it with a cripple and slow llano, I'm going to just get a i5 or i7. When they get some 12 and 13.3 stuff to market I'll get interested...
  • duploxxx - Tuesday, September 20, 2011 - link

    That is up to OEM to design, there are lots of people these days who want large screen and low price, they seem to target Liano for that, I also want a 13-14"based Liano but can't seem to find it....

    Liano slow, yeah right for common tasks it is more then powerfull enough, as if one would care if a laptop boots 2 sec faster and firefox starts 0,5sec faster. The crapload of SW that OEM deploy on those machines already makes it horrible even on an i7 so called supper fast CPU....for the ultimate benchmark experience :D

    storage these days is the slow factor in a laptop, unless off course you work with an Atom...
  • JarredWalton - Tuesday, September 20, 2011 - link

    Filiprino, I don't know about all programs, but it is definitely possible to use OpenCL with the VAIO CA. You just have to switch to manual mode to get it to work, and you'll be running 11.1 drivers. I did get the Bitcoin GUIminer to work with the Sony as a test, for example, but it totally failed to detect the GPU when in dynamic mode. (Note: 68Mhash/sec isn't fast enough to be worthwhile of course, and given the pricing on BTC these days I wouldn't bother trying to get involved with the scheme. It's still a useful benchmark at times, though.)
  • Filiprino - Wednesday, September 21, 2011 - link

    Thank you, although I'm more worried about the driver upgrading viability and the performance improvements they can bring :-/
  • BryanC - Tuesday, September 20, 2011 - link

    Did I miss the battery life comparison?
  • JarredWalton - Tuesday, September 20, 2011 - link

    I'm going to post that in the full review; this was intended to focus solely on switching technology, as it was already plenty long. In case you're wondering though, here are the numbers. Acer has a 66Wh battery and Sony has a 59Wh battery.

    Acer 3830TG Optimus:
    Idle: 580 minutes
    Internet: 461 minutes
    H.264: 344 minutes

    Acer 3830TG GT 540M:
    H.264: 248 minutes

    Sony VAIO C IGP:
    Idle: 574 minutes
    Internet: 417 minutes
    H.264: 358 minutes

    Sony VAIO C 6630M:
    Idle: 415 minutes
    Internet: 336 minutes
    H.264: 276 minutes
  • fabarati - Tuesday, September 20, 2011 - link

    I'm pretty sure the AMD HD 6700-series are just the HD6600-series with higher clocks or GDDR5. They're all Turks-based.

    It's the HD 6500-series that are rebranded HD 5600/5700s (Redwood). Something that's also pretty obvious if you look at the core configurations.
  • chinedooo - Wednesday, September 21, 2011 - link

    Yea they are all the same 480 stream porcessor chips. But the 6770 has got higher clocks and gddr5. The GDDR5 makes a world of difference.
  • duploxxx - Tuesday, September 20, 2011 - link

    I have a latitude e6520 i7 with NV Quadro

    The GPU switch works well as long as the NV configuration has the right profile for the right game, if the profile isn't available you sometimes face issues. (just black screen, why at that point it doesn't run on the Intel GPU I don't know.....)

    THe only way to avoid this is to add the exe to the profile, or to right click the application and select the GPU to run with. Works fine but i would expect this to be the same with ATI no?

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