Far Cry 3

The final new game added to the latest rendition of our benchmark suite is Far Cry 3, Ubisoft’s recently released island-jungle action game. A lot like our other jungle game Crysis, Far Cry 3 can be quite tough on GPUs, especially with MSAA and improved alpha-to-coverage checking thrown into the mix. On the other hand it’s still a bit of a pig on the CPU side, and seemingly inexplicably we’ve found that it doesn’t play well with HyperThreading on our testbed, making this the only game we’ve ever had to disable HT for to maximize our framerates.

For the 7970GE and GTX 680, FC3 at 2560 was already a very close match. Or put another way, with the 7970GE and GTX 680 tied up with each other, Titan is free to clear the both of them by approximately 35% each at 2560. This is enough to launch Titan past the 60fps mark, the first for any single-GPU card.

As for our other resolutions, it’s interesting to note that the gains at both 5760 and 1920 with MSAA are actually greater than at 2560. As we mentioned before Far Cry is somewhat demanding on the CPU side of things, so Titan may not be fully stretching out at 2560. In which case the performance gains due to Titan would be closer to 45-50%.

Moving on to our multi-GPU cards, this is something of a mixed bag. Titan isn’t close to winning, but GTX 690 wins by under 30%, and 7990 by just 17%. This is despite the fact that SLI/CF scaling is as strong as it is. At the same time Far Cry 3 is a good contemporary reminder of just what Titan can excel at: had Titan been out in 2012, it would have been doing roughly this well while NVIDIA would have still been hammering out their SLI profiles for this game. Multi-GPU cards are powerful, but they are forever reliant on waiting for profiles to unlock their capabilities.

Crysis: Warhead Battlefield 3
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  • Sufo - Thursday, February 21, 2013 - link

    lol, you clearly haven't run a dual gpu setup.
  • Veteranv2 - Thursday, February 21, 2013 - link

    Such a shame. How you can you disregard all the dual GPU cards?
    Another biased review. I miss the time when Anand used to be objective. Now it is just a Intel/Nvidia propaganda site. Not even an objective final thoughts. It is really a shame. I feel sad.
  • Ryan Smith - Thursday, February 21, 2013 - link

    Um? They're there. Along with 680 SLI and 7970GE CrossFire.
  • processinfo - Thursday, February 21, 2013 - link

    Act surprised? He means that in final thoughts you downplaying fact that Titan is slower than dual GPU cards. I agree with him. It seems biased, especially when later you talk about 3 way SLI with Titan that would have same issues like dual GPU cards. They cost the same or less and they are faster. For gaming this card brings nothing to the table. For $500-600 it would be different story.
  • Ryan Smith - Thursday, February 21, 2013 - link

    Ahh.

    So our editorial stance is that while SLI/CF are great, they should only be used to increase performance beyond what a single large GPU can accomplish. AFR comes with some very notable penalties, and while these are acceptable when you can go no bigger, we do not believe these are good tradeoffs to make otherwise.

    It's the same reason why we didn't recommend cards like the GTX 560 Ti 2Win over the GTX 580.

    http://www.anandtech.com/show/5048/evgas-geforce-g...

    Simply put we'd rather have the more consistent performance and freedom from profiles that having a single GTX Titan provides, over the higher but also more unreliable performance of a GTX 690.
  • Alucard291 - Thursday, February 21, 2013 - link

    Well its exactly as you said Ryan. Its overpriced and badly positioned in the market (except you used much kinder words - presumably to keep your paycheck)

    Its a nice, pointless consumer (that's a key word right here) gpu which brings benefits (what are those benefits exactly?) of overpriced compute performance to people who don't need compute performance.

    Beautiful move Nvidia.
  • processinfo - Thursday, February 21, 2013 - link

    It is not about recommendation. I prefer single GPU and no SLI configs myself.
    It is about a fact that it is just slower than anything with similar price tag.
    This is card only for people who need both: fast gaming card and computing card in one (or for those who don't care about a price).
  • Hrel - Thursday, February 21, 2013 - link

    I think it's about time you re-asses that stance. SLI/CF has come a long way in the past few years.

    Also, 1000 dollars for one card puts it so far out of consideration it doesn't even count as an option for single GPU use. Which was why he said "For $500-600 it would be a different story". For gaming this card is useless. For Compute it seems 7970GHE would be a better option too. Again, based solely on price. Performance is close enough it makes WAY more sense to just buy 2 of those for 860 bucks if you really need to do some serious GPU compute.
  • Ryan Smith - Thursday, February 21, 2013 - link

    Actually we did re-assess our stance ahead of this article.

    Far Cry 3 came out and SLI didn't work correctly; it took a few NVIDIA releases to get it up to where it is today. That's exactly the kind of scenario that drives our existing stance.
  • CeriseCogburn - Thursday, February 21, 2013 - link

    Yes, of course, forget mentioning the half decade of AMD epic failure in CF...

    It's just amazing what I read here. The bias is so glaring a monkey couldn't miss it.

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