Dell XPS 15 Gaming Performance (with ThrottleStop)

This is where things get a bit messy and confusing. The CPU throttling on BIOS version A01 through A04 is a severe enough problem that out-of-box gaming performance on the XPS 15 is substantially lower than expected. In most games that we tested, CPU throttling kicks in after anywhere from 30 to 90 seconds, at which point the CPU sits at 1.2GHz until you exit the game. This makes benchmark results highly variable, with the first run always being the fastest, and frankly it’s unacceptable. How this slipped through the cracks on a shipping laptop is something of a mystery, as it took all of five minutes with DiRT 3 and Batman: Arkham City for me to determine something was wrong with performance, and to then track down the root cause. OEMs take note: both games have built-in benchmarks and your performance labs should be using these and other high-profile games to check performance before you start shipping product. End of discussion.

Now, with that out of the way, we wanted to see what the XPS 15 could do with a bit of fine tuning on CPU clocks. Under the default settings on the A04 BIOS, CPU temperatures topped out at 80C, which is lower than we’ve seen on quite a few laptops. Furthermore, CPU clocks were almost always 2.8GHz (maximum Turbo Boost for four threads or more on the i7-3612QM) before throttling down to 1.2GHz, which seems rather myopic. The whole point of Intel’s Turbo Boost is to let the CPU run at the maximum sustainable clock speed without overheating, and right now that’s not happening.

A bit of tinkering with ThrottleStop 5.0 Beta 3 yielded CPU temperatures in the 80-90C range with a 23X multiplier, with some games capable of running at 2.5 or even 2.6GHz without overheating. Again, this isn’t something an end user should be required to use in our opinion, but thankfully it does allow substantially improved performance and it’s easy enough to enable/disable as needed. Depending on the game in question, we saw performance improve by anywhere from 10% to over 100% by using a 23X multiplier with the CPU PROC HOT signal disabled—Batman and DiRT 3 showed the greatest improvements. Note also that the difference at higher quality settings isn’t as large, as the GPU becomes more of a bottleneck. We have 1080p “Enthusiast” results for the XPS 15 as well as our 768p “Value” and 900p “Mainstream” scores, but in most games 1080p Enthusiast wasn’t playable so we won’t report those scores for now. Let’s start with our Value and Mainstream results, and then we’ll list “recommended” settings and frame rates for the XPS 15 running at 1080p.

Value Gaming Performance

Batman: Arkham City - Value

Battlefield 3 - Value

Civilization V - Value

DiRT 3 - Value

Elder Scrolls: Skyrim - Value

Portal 2 - Value

Total War: Shogun 2 - Value

Our Value settings don’t pose any problem for the XPS 15, with all games easily besting 30FPS and most surpassing the 60FPS mark. The XPS 15 basically sweeps the table against the Acer V3, showing the value of using GDDR5 memory instead of DDR3 memory on the GPU. Also worth note is that Civilization V performance continues to be a bit quirky with certain driver versions; the original 296.01 drivers couldn’t even break 30FPS regardless of setting on the XPS 15, while the newer 304.79 beta drivers at least let you get 35FPS. One quick look at the W110ER results however shows that we ought to be able to get performance closer to 50FPS. I ran FRAPS while performing the Civ5 “lategameview” benchmark at one point to see what was going on, and for some reason performance appeared to fluctuate between 50FPS and 35FPS, where normally the frame rate is pretty steady. I’d guess a future NVIDIA driver will address the issue.

Mainstream Gaming Performance

Batman: Arkham City - Mainstream

Battlefield 3 - Mainstream

Civilization V - Mainstream

DiRT 3 - Mainstream

Elder Scrolls: Skyrim - Mainstream

Portal 2 - Mainstream

Total War: Shogun 2 - Mainstream

Mainstream performance generally follows the same pattern, only with lower frame rates. The GT 640M with GDDR5 is close to handling all of our test suite at 900p “High” details, with Battlefield 3 and Civilization V being the only two games where we’d recommend dropping to lower detail settings (and again, the drivers are likely a factor in Civ5 performance). It’s also interesting that the Acer V3 manages to eke out a win in Batman, indicating our lowered CPU clocks might be coming into play. Otherwise, the use of GDDR5 is typically able to improve GT 640M performance by an average of 8%, with up to 25% higher performance in at least one game (Batman using our Value settings).

Dell XPS 15 Gaming
Recommended Settings for 1920x1080
Game Detail FPS Notes
Batman: Arkham City Very High +
4xAA
46 DX11 and PhysX both tend to be too much for
the GT 640M, but you can max everything
else out and maintain smooth frame rates.
Battlefield 3 Medium
(“Value”)
32.6 Single-player is okay at these settings, but
multi-player will need to drop the resolution
or use custom settings with some items on Low.
Civilization V Low (“Value”) 32.3 Civ5 needs a better driver, and we’ve seen
higher scores in the past. Until then, setting
everything to “Low” is your best bet for 1080p.
DiRT 3 High + 4xAA 45.8 Very fluid at the High defaults with 4xAA. If
you try Ultra without AA, you’ll be closer to
30FPS.
Portal 2 Max + 4xAA 57.8 You can pretty much max out the settings in
Portal 2 and still maintain fluid frame rates.
Skyrim Ultra + 4xAA 30.8 Skyrim is playable at 30FPS, and so our
Enthusiast defaults work well enough. If you
want slightly higher performance, you can use
FXAA instead of 4xAA and get 35 FPS.
Total War: Shogun 2 High
(“Mainstream”)
34.8 The “High” preset seems to work best, though
“Very High” with AA disabled is also viable.

Most of the games’ settings are straightforward, but a couple warrant further explanation. In Batman, enabling Very High with PhysX is borderline playable, with an average frame rate of 27 FPS; DX11 without 4xAA is a similar 26 FPS, and enabling 4xAA in either mode drops a few FPS whereas FXAA is basically free. Civ5 performance is still a bit chaotic (see below), so take those scores with a grain of salt for now. Finally, our test scene in Skyrim happens to be one of the lowest performing areas we could find, so while we report 30 FPS there are many areas in the game that will run in excess of 60 FPS.

As mentioned earlier, Civilization V and Total War: Shogun 2 ran better with the most recent 304.79 beta drivers, and that’s what we used for the above settings. The remaining games all ran best with the official 296.01 Dell drivers, though at some point we expect to see a new WHQL driver that will provide the best of both worlds (and hopefully further improve Civ5 performance). Not shown in our charts is another popular game, Diablo III; given that the Acer V3 could handle maxed out settings, the same holds for the XPS 15. With GDDR5 memory, the GT 640M ends up being around 10% faster on average compared to DDR3; it can certainly handle gaming at 1080p, but in many games you’ll need to lower the detail settings somewhat to be fully playable.

Dell XPS 15 General Performance Dell XPS 15 Battery Life
Comments Locked

109 Comments

View All Comments

  • xype - Wednesday, July 25, 2012 - link

    Never said it was the pinnacle. But feel free to educate me how above industry average growth is "struggling" or, alternatively, show me some data for the past 5 years that shows Apple’s sales dipping lower than those of their competitors.

    Unless, for some reason, Apple gets paid with magic dollars that increase their value after Apple receives them, their PC profits do not come about from "struggling".

    But hey, since you told me, I’m gonna get a real hard grip on my desk now while you look for data to support your claims. Wheee!
  • ananduser - Wednesday, July 25, 2012 - link

    Above average industry growth ? You should check Lenovo and Asus' numbers for above average growth, double digits. For the most recent quarter Apple stagnated.
  • xype - Thursday, July 26, 2012 - link

    Ugh. Yeah, most recent quarter. That totally negates the past, what, 5 years? Apple is doomed! o_O
  • ananduser - Thursday, July 26, 2012 - link

    I didn't say that. You seem to extract Apple out of the PC landscape like they were pushing PowerPC hardware. Not anymore. Ever since they switched to Intel their growth was steady but small. So no Apple does not have above average industry growth. Other PC OEMs do.
  • CeriseCogburn - Sunday, July 29, 2012 - link

    Hey you got overconfident and he upped the ante and provided the heat that destroyed your smug appletude.
    The least you should have done is take it like an appleseed, but instead you smarted off and made up a sucky strawman.
    tsk tsk, Steve is disappointed. You're fired.
  • yyrkoon - Wednesday, July 25, 2012 - link

    Except, those "PC makers" who are "retards" actually contribute to the technology specifications. For hardware used in your precious Apple systems.

    x86-64 CPU's /chipsets, nVidia graphics cards, SATA, PCIe, Thunderbolt, , etc, etc.

    Matter of a fact. Apple did not even make the first laptop. Epson 1981, Microsoft 1982, Compaq 1988, IBM 1984, Radio Shack 1983 ( In collaboration with Microsoft ), and possibly NEC 1989 all had designs before Apple in 1989. Not to mention others dating back to 1979.

    So who is thinking "differently" again ? Do not even get me started on OSX.

    So, if not for the technology giants of the world. Apple would not even have existed. Like many others in the industry, they take the ideas from others, and improve on them. Improvement is also a subjective term in this situation.
  • xype - Thursday, July 26, 2012 - link

    Who contributes to technology specifications? Dell? Asus? Acer? HP?

    Did Intel start targeting the ultra-low-power CPU specs because of all of these guys, who made the first "Ultrabook"?

    And how "special" do you have to be to think I was claiming Apple made the first laptop? Duh?

    Unibody aluminium enclosures, retina display, the ultrabook form factor, thunderbolt, etc are not popping up in Acers and Asuses and Dells first. I’m NOT claiming Apple is the end all be all (as some specialitos here seem to think), but they DO contribute their share to the ecosystem and claiming they don’t and that they are just "assembling" PC parts is reeking of butthurt, especially seeing how HP and now Dell seem completely unable to make "premium" laptops that don’t looks like MacBook knock-offs.

    Which is my original point: it’s annoying that they don’t, because people are not buying only Macs and it would be really nice to have some hardware that actually looked different. They just don’t give enough of a shit.
  • yyrkoon - Friday, July 27, 2012 - link

    The point was. Apple does currently makes a system that is based on PC ( x86 compatible ) parts. They do not come up with technology ideas. They buy decent / good parts and assemble them. Then they write a limited driver base into their operating system to support such hardware.

    Which in fact is a good idea, but very limited. General purpose computing, that is limited by software support. For software titles, and additional hardware. Then, it is also very proprietary in comparison to other alternatives. You're locked into their hardware, and software.

    The reason why OEM PC vendors "dont give a shit" is that such systems cost a lot, and PC system purchasers are cheap. If you were to compare lets say Dell to Apple. I think you would find that Dell probably sells many more systems *This* is an "Apple" to Apples comparison. Now, as for who actually makes more money . . . I have no idea. Nor do I care.

    As far as who actually contributes to PC technology. Try using google. I think you would very likely find Intel, AMD, IBM, supermicro, and Epson among them. Then, many others in the PC industry like Asus.
  • CeriseCogburn - Sunday, July 29, 2012 - link

    A black keyboard area is a scourge on us all.

    Used to be you could see all laptop keyboards in the dark without back lighting, until the pliable masses were all doggy trained into loving black on everything - now they're just invisible past dusk. Pavlov man - the training is actually amazing.

    Yeah, so strike one for the crap black keyboard and area, and I include the mindless drooling dogams in that strike as well.
    That's also why they all make maccy looking clones- because the idiot masses respond like clockwork.
  • yyrkoon - Wednesday, July 25, 2012 - link

    Jarred, how about setting processor affinity to 2 cores only ? Then retesting a game or two ? The results should be interesting.

    I'm thinking that game performance should get a boost, and CPU temps should drop some.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now