Batman: Arkham City

After a rocky launch last month, Rocksteady finally got their DirectX 11 problems sorted out for Batman: Arkham City earlier this month. Batman: Arkham City is loosely based on Unreal Engine 3, while the DirectX 11 functionality was apparently developed in-house. With the addition of these features Batman is far more a GPU demanding game than its predecessor was, particularly with tessellation cranked up to high.

Batman: Arkham City

Batman: Arkham City

Batman: Arkham City

At Extreme settings Batman is quite daunting for our entire GPU lineup at 2560. Nothing except the GTX 590 can crack 60fps, though the 7970 begins to come close at 52fps. Relative to NVIDIA’s lineup Batman ends up being one of the weaker games for the 7970, with the 7970 only taking an 18% lead over the GTX 580 at 2560. As for the 6970, the 7970 has another very strong showing opposite AMD’s previous generation, beating the 6970 by 44%.

At 1920 we’re still using Extreme settings and the story is much the same, though the 7970’s lead drops a bit more. Against the GTX 580 it’s now only 14% faster, and against the 6970 it’s 35% faster. Things do eventually pick up at 1680 when we back off to Very High settings and stop using MSAA, at which point the 7970 takes a surprising 32% lead over the GTX 580 while the lead over the 6970 jumps back up to 47%.

Looking at all of our cards it’s really the 5870 that tells the whole story. Tessellation plays a large factor in Batman’s performance, and as a result the partially tessellation-constrained 5870 absolutely struggles even at 1920. Consequently this is further proof that AMD was able to get a great deal of additional performance out of their geometry engines even with the 2 tringle/clock limit.

Total War: Shogun 2 Portal 2
Comments Locked

292 Comments

View All Comments

  • chiddy - Thursday, December 22, 2011 - link

    Ryan,

    Thanks for the great review. My only gripe - and I've been noticing this for a while - is the complete non-mention of drivers or driver releases for Linux/Unix and/or their problems.

    For example, Catalyst drivers exhibit graphical corruption when using the latest version (Version 3) of Gnome Desktop Environment since its release before April. This is a major bug which required most users of AMD/ATI GPUs to either switch desktop environments, switch to Nvidia or Intel GPUs, or use the open source drivers which lack many features. A partial fix appeared in Catalyst 11.9 making Gnome3 usable but there are still elements of screen corruption on occassion. (Details in the "non-official" AMD run bugzilla http://ati.cchtml.com/show_bug.cgi?id=99 ).

    AMD have numerous other issues with Linux Catalyst drivers including buggy openGL implementation, etc.

    Essentially, as a hardware review, a quick once over with non-Microsoft OSs would help alot, especially for products which are marketed as supporting such platforms.

    Regards,
  • kyuu - Thursday, December 22, 2011 - link

    Why in the heck would they mention Linux drivers and their issues in an article covering the (paper) release and preliminary benchmarking of AMD's new graphics cards? It has nada to do with the subject at hand.

    Besides, hardly anyone cares, and those that do care already know.
  • chiddy - Thursday, December 22, 2011 - link

    And I guess that AMD GPUs are sold as "Windows Only"?

    Thanks for your informative insight.
  • MrSpadge - Thursday, December 22, 2011 - link

    There are no games for *nix and everything always depends on your distribution. The problems are so diverse and numerous.. it would take an entire article to briefly touch this field.
    Exagerating, but I really wouldn't be interested in endless *nix troubleshooting. Hell, I can't even get nVidia 2D acceleration in CentOS..
  • chiddy - Thursday, December 22, 2011 - link

    You have a valid point on that front and I agree, nor would I expect such an article any time soon.

    However, on the other hand, one would at the very least expect a GPU using manufacturer released drivers to load a usable desktop. This is an issue that was distro agnostic and instantly noticeable, and only affected AMD hardware, as do most *nix GPU driver issues!

    If all that was done during a new GPU review was fire it up in any *nix distribution of choice for just a few minutes (even Ubuntu as I think its the most popular at the moment) to ensure that the basics work it would still be a great help.

    I will have to accept though that there is precious little interest!
  • Ryan Smith - Thursday, December 22, 2011 - link

    Hi Chiddy;

    It's a fair request, so I'll give you a fair answer.

    The fact of the matter is that Linux drivers are not a top priority for either NVIDIA or AMD. Neither party makes Linux drivers available for our launch reviews, so I wouldn't be able to test new cards at launch. Not to speak for either company, but how many users are shelling out $550 to run Linux? Cards like the 7970 have a very specifically defined role: Windows gaming video card, and their actions reflect this.

    At best we'd be able to look at these issues at some point after the launch when AMD or NVIDIA have added support for the new product to their respective Linux drivers. But that far after the product's launch and for such a small category of users (there just aren't many desktop Linux users these days), I'm not sure it would be worth the effort on our part.
  • chiddy - Friday, December 23, 2011 - link

    Hi Ryan,

    Thanks very much for taking the time to respond. I fully appreciate your position, particularly as the posts above very much corroborate the lack of interest!

    Thanks again for the response, I very much appreciate the hard work yourself and the rest of the AT team are doing, and its quality speaks for itself in the steady increase in readers over the years.

    If you do however ever find the time to do a brief piece on *nix GPU support after launch of the next generation nVidia and AMD GPUs that would be wonderful - and even though one would definately not buy a top level GPU for *nix, it would very much help those of us who are dual booting (in my case Windows for gaming / Scientific Linux for work), and somewhat remove the guessing game during purchase time. If not though I fully understand :-).

    Regards,
    Ali
  • CeriseCogburn - Thursday, March 8, 2012 - link

    Nvidia consistenly wins over and over again in this area, so it's "of no interest", like PhysX...
  • AmdInside - Thursday, December 22, 2011 - link

    I won't be getting much sleep tonight since that article took a long time to read (can't imagine how long it must have taken to write up). Great article as usual. While it has some very nice features, all in all, it doesn't make me regret my purchase of a Geforce GTX 580 a couple of months ago. Especially since I mainly picked it up for Battlefield 3.
  • ET - Thursday, December 22, 2011 - link

    The Cayman GPU's got quite a performance boost from drivers over time, gaining on NVIDIA's GPU since their launce. The difference in architecture between the 79x0 and 69x0 is higher than the 69x0 and 58x0, so I'm sure there's quite a bit of room for performance improvement in games.

    Have to say though that I really hope AMD stops increasing the card size each generation.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now