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 (on higher end hardware at least).

Total War: Shogun 2 - 2560x1600 - Ultra Quality + 4xAA/16xAF

Total War: Shogun 2 - 1920x1200 - Very High Quality + 16xAF

Total War: Shogun 2 - 1680x1050 - High Quality + 16xAF

With Shogun 2 the GTX 680 sees its first decisive win at last. At the all-punishing resolution of 2560 the GTX 680 not only becomes the first single-GPU card to crack 30fps, but it takes a 16% lead over the 7970 here. Even at a more practical resolution and setting of 1920 the GTX 680 still leads by 15%. Meanwhile the GTX 580 fares even worse here, with the GTX 680 leading by 51% at 2560 and a whopping 63% at 1920. Even the GTX 590 can only barely beat the GTX 680 at 2560, only to lose at 1920.

At this point we’re not sure what it is about the GTX 680 that improves on the GTX 580 by so much. Shogun 2 does use a lot of VRAM, and while the greater amount of VRAM on the GTX 680 alone wouldn’t seem to explain this, the fact that most of that memory is consumed by textures just might. We may be seeing the benefit of the much greater number of texture units GTX 680 has.

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  • george1976 - Saturday, March 24, 2012 - link

    Excuse me sir but I think you've been reading the wrong article.
  • Ryan Smith - Thursday, March 22, 2012 - link

    Just a heads up guys, we're a bit behind schedule and are still adding images and tables, so hold on.
  • casteve - Thursday, March 22, 2012 - link

    whew - thought my coffee hadn't kicked in :)
  • Granseth - Thursday, March 22, 2012 - link

    Hi, liked the review but are missing a few things, though I expect them to be reviewed at a later time in a new article. Like the improved multi-screen support, SLI, overclocking and things like that.

    But I would like to know more about this turbo as well. What I am courious about is if it will boost minimum framerate as well as average framerate, or if the GPU is so taxed when it hits minimum framerate that it won't have anything extra to offer up to its turbo.
  • Ryan Smith - Thursday, March 22, 2012 - link

    Minimum framerates. -16% power target on the left, stock on the right.

    Crysis Min: 21.4...21.9

    Dirt3 Min: 73.4....77.1

    So to answer your question, it depends on the game.
  • Jamahl - Thursday, March 22, 2012 - link

    Just a comment on the power draw - I wonder if you could test the 680 and 7970 in a different game, say for example Batman of BF3. The reason for this is due to the 7970 winning in Metro, while losing in most of the others and I wonder if there is something going on regarding power draw.
  • CeriseCogburn - Friday, March 23, 2012 - link

    See the GTX 680 win in Metro 2033 all the way on up 1920 and 2560 resolutions >
    http://hothardware.com/Reviews/NVIDIA-GeForce-GTX-...

    What's different is AAA is used, as well as the Sandy E runs stock at 3,300 and is not overclocked.
    What appears to be a big problem for AMD cards is they have been offloading work to the cpu much more than the Nvidia cards, and even more so in CF v SLI, so when you don't have a monster CPU with a monster overclock to boot the AMD cards lose even worse.
  • SlyNine - Friday, March 23, 2012 - link

    Anandtech uses AAA for Metro.

    You need to look agian, the difference is no DOF and hothardware is running at lower settings.

    you, fail.
  • CeriseCogburn - Tuesday, March 27, 2012 - link

    Oh I didn't fail, I showed the 680 winning in the game that is claimed it loses in.
    That's a WIN for me, period.
  • SlyNine - Friday, April 27, 2012 - link

    Ok so your 500$ video card can win at lower settings than the 459$ videocard.

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