Civilization V

A game that has plagued my testing over the past twelve months is Civilization V. Being on the older 12.3 Catalyst drivers were somewhat of a nightmare, giving no scaling, and as a result I dropped it from my test suite after only a couple of reviews. With the later drivers used for this review, the situation has improved but only slightly, as you will see below. Civilization V seems to run into a scaling bottleneck very early on, and any additional GPU allocation only causes worse performance.

Our Civilization V testing uses Ryan’s GPU benchmark test all wrapped up in a neat batch file. We test at 1440p, and report the average frame rate of a 5 minute test.

One 7970

Civilization V - One 7970, 1440p, Max Settings

Civilization V is the first game where we see a gap when comparing processor families. A big part of what makes Civ5 perform at the best rates seems to be PCIe 3.0, followed by CPU performance – our PCIe 2.0 Intel processors are a little behind the PCIe 3.0 models. By virtue of not having a PCIe 3.0 AMD motherboard in for testing, the bad rap falls on AMD until PCIe 3.0 becomes part of their main game.

Two 7970s

Civilization V - Two 7970s, 1440p, Max Settings

The power of PCIe 3.0 is more apparent with two 7970 GPUs, however it is worth noting that only processors such as the i5-2500K and above have actually improved their performance with the second GPU. Everything else stays relatively similar.

Three 7970s

Civilization V - Three 7970, 1440p, Max Settings

More cores and PCIe 3.0 are winners here, but no GPU configuration has scaled above two GPUs.

Four 7970s

Civilization V - Four 7970, 1440p, Max Settings

Again, no scaling.

One 580

Civilization V - One 580, 1440p, Max Settings

While the top end Intel processors again take the lead, an interesting point is that now we have all PCIe 2.0 values for comparison, the non-hyper threaded 2500K takes the top spot, 10% higher than the FX-8350.

Two 580s

Civilization V - Two 580s, 1440p, Max Settings

We have another Intel/AMD split, by virtue of the fact that none of the AMD processors scaled above the first GPU. On the Intel side, you need at least an i5-2500K to see scaling, similar to what we saw with the 7970s.

Civilization V conclusion

Intel processors are the clear winner here, though not one stands out over the other. Having PCIe 3.0 seems to be the positive point for Civilization V, but in most cases scaling is still out of the window unless you have a monster machine under your belt.

GPU Benchmarks: Dirt 3 GPU Benchmarks: Sleeping Dogs
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  • JarredWalton - Wednesday, May 8, 2013 - link

    I'm getting close to doing so, as his "contributions" are completely useless. Vote here for banning or not -- I'm inclined to just leave it be for now, but if he continues to post prolifically with nothing meaningful, I'll take action.
  • Egg - Wednesday, May 8, 2013 - link

    Please, yes, ban
  • silverblue - Thursday, May 9, 2013 - link

    Seconded... it gets tiresome after a while.
  • Donniesito - Thursday, May 9, 2013 - link

    Please ban
  • jjmcubed - Thursday, May 9, 2013 - link

    ban please
  • jjmcubed - Thursday, May 9, 2013 - link

    I did not mean Donniestio... me smart good.
  • iamezza - Thursday, May 9, 2013 - link

    Please ban him. There really is no reason to leave trolls like this on the forum, they contribute nothing and constantly derail meaningful discussion.
    I can't think of a single reason to not ban him (and other) trolls.
  • creed3020 - Thursday, May 9, 2013 - link

    Please ban, I come down here to read constructive comments not useless dribble.
  • R3MF - Thursday, May 9, 2013 - link

    ban.
  • smuff3758 - Thursday, May 9, 2013 - link

    Ban this loser. He simply can not leave his fan boy status alone long enough to evaluate an outstanding SCIENTIFC analysis. I love both Intel and AMD CPU's. Both have their places just depends on what your objectives are.

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