Our 2015 GPU Benchmark Suite

Also kicking off alongside GTX Titan X today will be the first article to use our new 2015 GPU benchmark suite.

For 2015 we have upgraded or replaced most of our games, retiring several long-time titles including Bioshock: Infinite, Metro, and our last DirectX 10 game, Crysis Warhead. Our returning titles are Battlefield 4 and Crysis 3, the former of which is still a popular MP title to this day, and the latter continuing to pulverize GPUs well before we hit its highest settings.

Joining these 2 games are 7 new titles. Middle Earth: Shadow of Mordor and Far Cry 4 are our new action/shooter games, while Dragon Age: Inquisition rides the line between an action game and an RPG. Meanwhile for strategy games we have Civilization: Beyond Earth and Total War: Attila, these two games representing the latest entries in their respective series. Rounding out our collection is GRID Autosport, the latest GRID game from Codemasters, and the unique first person puzzle/exploration game The Talos Principle from Croteam.

AnandTech GPU Bench 2015 Game List
Game Genre API(s)
Battlefield 4 FPS DX11 + Mantle
Crysis 3 FPS DX11
Shadow of Mordor Action/Open World DX11
Civilization: Beyond Earth Strategy DX11 + Mantle
Dragon Age: Inquisition RPG DX11 + Mantle
The Talos Principle First Person Puzzle DX11
Far Cry 4 FPS DX11
Total War: Attila Strategy DX11
GRID Autosport Racing DX11

With new low-level APIs ramping up in 2015, we’re going to be paying particular attention to APIs starting this year, as everyone is interested in seeing what Vulkan (née Mantle) and DirectX 12 can do. Unless otherwise noted, going forward all benchmarks will be using low-level APIs when available, meaning DX12/Vulkan/Mantle when possible.

Meanwhile from a design standpoint our benchmark settings remain unchanged. For lower-end cards we’ll look at 1080p at various quality settings when practical, and for high-end cards we’ll be looking at 1080p and above at the highest quality settings. The one exception to this is 4K, which at 2.25x the resolution of 1440p remains difficult to hit playable framerates, in which case we’ll also include a lower quality setting to showcase what kind of quality hit it takes to make 4K playable on current video cards.

The Test

As for our hardware testbed, it remains unchanged from 2014, being composed of an overclocked Core i7-4960X hosed in an NZXT Phantom 630 Windowed Edition case.

CPU: Intel Core i7-4960X @ 4.2GHz
Motherboard: ASRock Fatal1ty X79 Professional
Power Supply: Corsair AX1200i
Hard Disk: Samsung SSD 840 EVO (750GB)
Memory: G.Skill RipjawZ DDR3-1866 4 x 8GB (9-10-9-26)
Case: NZXT Phantom 630 Windowed Edition
Monitor: Asus PQ321
Video Cards: AMD Radeon R9 295X2
AMD Radeon R9 290X
AMD Radeon HD 7990
NVIDIA GeForce GTX Titan X
NVIDIA GeForce GTX Titan
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 980
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 780 Ti
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 690
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 580
Video Drivers: NVIDIA Release 347.84 Beta
AMD Catalyst Cat 15.3 Beta
OS: Windows 8.1 Pro
Meet The GeForce GTX Titan X Battlefield 4
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  • looncraz - Tuesday, March 17, 2015 - link

    If the most recent slides (allegedly leaked from AMD) hold true, the 390x will be at least as fast as the Titan X, though with only 8GB of RAM (but HBM!).

    A straight 4096SP GCN 1.2/3 GPU would be a close match-up already, but any other improvements made along the way will potentially give the 390X a fairly healthy launch-day lead.

    I think nVidia wanted to keep AMD in the dark as much as possible so that they could not position themselves to take more advantage of this, but AMD decided to hold out, apparently, until May/June (even though they apparently already have some inventory on hand) rather than give nVidia a chance to revise the Titan X before launch.

    nVidia blinked, it seems, after it became apparent AMD was just going to wait out the clock with their current inventory.
  • zepi - Wednesday, March 18, 2015 - link

    Unless AMD has achieved considerable increase in perf/w, they are going to have really hard time tuning those 4k shaders to a reasonable frequency without being a 450W card.

    Not that being a 500W is necessarily a deal breaker for everyone, but in practice cooling a 450W card without causing ear shattering level of noise is very difficult compared to cooling a 250W card.

    Let us wait and hope, since AMD really would need to get a break and make some money on this one...
  • looncraz - Wednesday, March 18, 2015 - link

    Very true. We know that with HBM there should already be a fairly beefy power savings (~20-30W vs 290X it seems).

    That doesn't buy them room for 1,280 more SPs, of course, but it should get them a healthy 256 of them. Then, GCN 1.3 vs 1.1 should have power advantages as well. GCN 1.2 vs 1.0 (R9 285 vs R9 280) with 1792 SPs showed a 60W improvement, if we assume GCN 1.1 to GCN 1.3 shows a similar trend the 390X should be pulling only about 15W more than the 290X with the rumored specs without any other improvements.

    Of course, the same math says the 290X should be drawing 350W, but that's because it assumes all the power is in the SPs... But I do think it reveals that AMD could possibly do it without drawing much, if any, more power without making any unprecedented improvements.
  • Braincruser - Wednesday, March 18, 2015 - link

    Yeah, but the question is, How well will the memory survive on top of a 300W GPU?
    Because the first part in a graphic card to die from high temperatures is the VRAM.
  • looncraz - Thursday, March 19, 2015 - link

    It will be to the side, on a 2.5d interposer, I believe.

    GPU thermal energy will move through the path of least resistance (technically, to the area with the greatest deltaT, but regulated by the material thermal conductivity coefficient), which should be into the heatsink or water block. I'm not sure, but I'd think the chips could operate in the same temperature range as the GPU, but maybe not. It may be necessary to keep them thermally isolated. Which shouldn't be too difficult, maybe as simple as not using thermal pads at all for the memory and allowing them to passively dissipate heat (or through interposer mounted heatsinks).

    It will be interesting to see what they have done to solve the potential issues, that's for sure.
  • Xenonite - Thursday, March 19, 2015 - link

    Yes, I agree that AMD would be able to absolutely destroy NVIDIA on the performance front if they designed a 500W GPU and left the PCB and waterblock design to their AIB partners.

    I would also absolutely love to see what kind of performance a 500W or even a 1kW graphics card would be able to muster; however, since a relatively constant 60fps presented with less than about 100ms of total system latency has been deemed sufficient for a "smooth and responsive" gaming experience, I simply can't imagine such a card ever seeing the light of day.
    And while I can understand everyone likes to pretend that they are saving the planet with their <150W GPUs, the argument that such a TDP would be very difficult to cool does not really hold much water IMHO.

    If, for instance, the card was designed from the ground up to dissipate its heat load over multiple 200W~300W GPUs, connected via a very-high-speed, N-directional data interconnect bus, the card could easily and (most importantly) quietly be cooled with chilled-watercooling dissipating into a few "quad-fan" radiators. Practically, 4 GM200-size GPUs could be placed back-to-back on the PCB, with each one rendering a quarter of the current frame via shared, high-speed frame buffers (thereby eliminating SLI-induced microstutter and "frame-pacing" lag). Cooling would then be as simple as installing 4 standard gpu-watercooling loops with each loop's radiator only having to dissipate the TDP of a single GPU module.
  • naxeem - Tuesday, March 24, 2015 - link

    They did solve that problem with a water-cooling solution. 390X WCE is probably what we'll get.
  • ShieTar - Wednesday, March 18, 2015 - link

    Who says they don't allow it? EVGA have already anounced two special models, a superclocked one and one with a watercooling-block:

    http://eu.evga.com/articles/00918/EVGA-GeForce-GTX...
  • Wreckage - Tuesday, March 17, 2015 - link

    If by fast you mean June or July. I'm more interested in a 980ti so I don't need a new power supply.
  • ArmedandDangerous - Saturday, March 21, 2015 - link

    There won't ever be a 980 Ti if you understand Nvidia's naming schemes. Ti's are for unlocked parts, there's nothing to further unlock on the 980 GM204.

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