Total War: Shogun 2

Total War: Shogun 2 is the latest installment of the long-running Total War series of turn based strategy games, and alongside Civilization V is notable for just how many units it can put on a screen at once. As it also turns out, it’s the single most punishing game in our benchmark suite.

With Shogun 2, the 7950 once again shifts into a comfortable lead over the GTX 580. At 2560 the 7950 is ahead by 7%, while at 1920 and its lower settings this grows to 17%. Relative to the 7970 the 7950 is consistently behind by 18%, indicating that Shogun 2 is largely shader bound, and as a result giving us one of the largest gaps between the 7970 and 7950 in our benchmark suite. This also means the factory overclocked cards can’t get quite as close to the 7970 as they can in other games, but at the same time it means performance generally scales very closely with clockspeed, with the XFX and Sapphire cards picking up 11% and 10% respectively.

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  • Galidou - Sunday, February 5, 2012 - link

    Everyone is against you but still after all that, you continue to beleive in whatever nonsense you say from the beginning. Not even one person in here supported your opinions, whatever the market is, it just means one thing, you are a selfish nvidia HARDCORE fanboy who gets paid by the green goblin to speak your nonsense.....

    AMD fanboys are intense at times, but you clearly are a madman, the world would say you're wrong that you'd still beleive you're better than everyone else, but if you were, you'd be rich and not spending your time speaking on forums like this one.
  • SlyNine - Sunday, February 5, 2012 - link

    You're kidding right rarson.
    What metric do you think we should use to determine value if not through precedence.

    If you're questioning using precedent as a metering stick for value. Hell even the legal system uses precedents to try and determine law, but to you it's not good enough for video cards.
  • SlyNine - Sunday, February 5, 2012 - link

    yea based on old nods. new nods bring cheaper parts with better performence. THATS WHAT THIS IS ALL ABOUT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  • SlyNine - Sunday, February 5, 2012 - link

    So the 5870 was priced according to the competition.

    No you're full of shit because new cards always bring better performence for the price.
  • SlyNine - Sunday, February 5, 2012 - link

    Actually you fail to use logic plenty of times in your arguments. Also I call your consistency in to question.

    Like for instance, the simple fact that new nods= cheaper performence, not better performence that scales with price.

    Not sure why you cannot get that simple bit of logic figured out.
  • Deo Domuique - Wednesday, February 8, 2012 - link

    Hey chizow, your comments kept me eventually away from buying the 7950. I use 12 years gaming PCs and always I had Nvidia. This time would be the first that I'd go to AMD's camp.

    Although, I already had too many concerns ( especially the high price ), I could't keep myself. But finally, I did. I'll wait for Kepler. If the 7950's price currently was 320-330€ and not 410€, right now I'd have already the card.
  • Apis - Sunday, April 22, 2012 - link

    They are currently dropping the prices for the 7xxx series, I'm found one sapphire 7950 3gb for 360€ when looking right now.
  • Apis - Sunday, April 22, 2012 - link

    In this "Compute: Civilization V" benchmark Radeon HD 5870 got 154.9 FPS
    In the 6970 review, http://www.anandtech.com/show/4061/amds-radeon-hd-... the 5870 got 181.9 FPS.

    Why the regression?
  • Wolfpup - Friday, July 20, 2012 - link

    Traditionally Nvidia's hardware has smashed AMD's for Folding, but it looks like PROBABLY the 7970 and 7950 should be respectable with the new architecture...

    I can't actually find ANYONE talking about the issue though or benchmarking...

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