Total War: Rome 2

The second strategy game in our benchmark suite, Total War: Rome 2 is the latest game in the Total War franchise. Total War games have traditionally been a mix of CPU and GPU bottlenecks, so it takes a good system on both ends of the equation to do well here. In this case the game comes with a built-in benchmark that plays out over a forested area with a large number of units, definitely stressing the GPU in particular.

For this game in particular we’ve also gone and turned down the shadows to medium. Rome’s shadows are extremely CPU intensive (as opposed to GPU intensive), so this keeps us from CPU bottlenecking nearly as easily.

Total War: Rome 2 - 3840x2160 - Very High Quality + Med. Shadows

Total War: Rome 2 - 2560x1440 - Extreme Quality + Med. Shadows

For the moment we are including Total War: Rome II as a “freebie” in this review, as neither AMD nor NVIDIA is able to properly render this game. A recent patch for the game made it AFR friendly, unlocking multi-GPU scaling that hasn’t been available for the several months prior. However due to what’s presumably an outstanding bug in the game, when using CF/SLI we’re seeing different rendering artifacts on both AMD and NVIDIA cards.

Given the nature of the artifacting we suspect that performance will remain roughly the same once the problem is resolved, in which case the 295X2 will hold a small but significant lead, but there is no way to know for sure until the rendering issue is corrected. In the meantime this is progress for all multi-GPU cards, even if the game’s developers don’t have it perfected quite yet.

Crysis: Warhead Thief
Comments Locked

131 Comments

View All Comments

  • Dupl3xxx - Wednesday, April 9, 2014 - link

    $2k+ for a 4k screen? where are you wasing your money? In norway, you can get a 4k screen for just about 5kNOK, or just about 850USD, including tax! also, why would you need a $1500 CPU, whene the 4930k is 200MHz slower, for half the price?

    Also, WHY would you want 32GB of 2400MHz ram!?!?!?! There is next to no improvement over 1600MHz!

    As far as SSD's goes, a single samsung 250/500GB should be plenty, you got 32GB of ram to use as buffer!

    And if you want a "tight" system with insane preformance, the 295x2 is the best choice ATM. Double the 290x preformance, "half" the size.
  • lehtv - Wednesday, April 9, 2014 - link

    Another difference is the way this card handles heat compared to any 290X CF setup apart from custom water cooling. The CLLC combines the benefits of reference GPUs - the ability to exhaust hot air externally rather than into the case - with the benefits of third party cooling - the ability to keep temperatures and noise levels lower than those of reference blower cards. A 290X crossfire setup using reference cooling is not even worth considering for anyone who cares about noise output, while third party 290X crossfire is restricted to cases with enough cooling capacity to handle the heat.
  • Supersonic494 - Friday, April 11, 2014 - link

    You are right, but keep in mind on big limitation with normal crossfire/SLI is the space taken up by 2 big dual slot GPUs, with this it is only one slot; however other than that you might as well get 2 290x's
  • bj_murphy - Friday, April 11, 2014 - link

    Dual GPU doesn't have the requirement for 2 PCI-E slots; you can't do SLI/Crossfire in a Mini-ITX system for example.
  • HalloweenJack - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link

    muppet - 20w more in furmark , and 160 in games - not hundreds more. keep drinking the ananadtech koolaid.
  • WaltC - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link

    Interesting. [H] seems to have done some pretty thorough testing, and the AMD card blows by 780Ti SLI in every single case. Of course, [H] is testing @ 4k resolutions/3-way Eyefinity exclusively--but that's where anyone who shells out this kind of money is going to be. 1080P? Don't make me laugh...;)
  • WaltC - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link

    Can't edit, so I'll just say I don't know where "1080P" came from...;)
  • lwooood - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link

    Apologies for going slightly OT. Is there any indication when AMD fills in the middle of their product stack with GCN 1.1 parts?
  • sascha - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link

    I like to know that, too!
  • MrSpadge - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link

    I would say that indication is 20 nm chips, at the end of the year the earliest.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now