Dragon Age: Inquisition

Our RPG of choice for 2015 is Dragon Age: Inquisition, the latest game in the Dragon Age series of ARPGs. Offering an expansive world that can easily challenge even the best of our video cards, Dragon Age also offers us an alternative take on EA/DICE’s Frostbite 3 engine, which powers this game along with Battlefield 4.

Dragon Age: Inquisition - 3840x2160 - Ultra Quality - 0x MSAA

Dragon Age: Inquisition - 3840x2160 - High Quality

Dragon Age: Inquisition - 2560x1440 - Ultra Quality - 0x MSAA

Dragon Age is another solid win for AMD at 4K, with the R9 Fury taking an 8-11% lead over the GTX 980. However it’s also a game that’s better played at 1440p than 4K on the R9 Fury, at which point that lead shrinks to just 2%. At the very least the R9 Fury can claim to be the minimum card required to crack 60fps at that resolution, a feat the GTX 980 falls just short of.

Civilization: Beyond Earth The Talos Principle
Comments Locked

288 Comments

View All Comments

  • SolMiester - Saturday, July 11, 2015 - link

    WOW, so much fail from AMD...might as well kiss their ass goodbye!
    Pimping the Fury at 4k, when really even the 980Ti is borderline on occasion, and releasing a card with no OC headroom at the same price as its competitor!
  • ES_Revenge - Saturday, July 11, 2015 - link

    I didn't have too high hopes for the "regular" Fury [Pro] after the disappointing Fury X. However I have to say...this thing makes the Fury X look bad, plain and simple. With a pretty significant cut-down (numerically) in SPs and 32 fewer TMUs, you'd expect this thing to be more of a yawn. Instead it gives very near to Fury X performance and still faster than a GTX 980.

    The only problem with it is price. At $550 it still costs more than a GTX 980 and Fury has less OC potential. And at only $100 less than Fury X it's not really much of a deal considering the AIO/CLC with that is probably worth $60-80. So really you're only paying $30 or so for the performance increase of Fury X (which isn't that much but it's still faster). What I suggest AMD "needs to do" is price this thing near to where they have the 390X priced. Fury Pro at ~$400 price will pull sales from Nvidia's 980 so fast it's not funny. Accordingly the 390X should be priced lower as well.

    But I guess AMD can't really afford to undercut Nvidia at the moment so they're screwed either way. Price is high, people aren't going to bother; lower the price and people will buy but then maybe they're just losing money.

    But imagine buying one of these at $400ish, strapping on an Asetek AIO/CLC you might have lying around (perhaps with a Kraken bracket), and you have a tiny little card* with a LOT of GPU power and nice low temps, with performance like a Fury X. Well one can dream, right? lol

    *What I don't understand is why Asus did a custom PCB to make the thing *longer*??? One of the coolest things about Fury is how small the card is. They just went and ruined that--they took it and turned it back into a 290X, the clowns. While the Sapphire one still straps on an insanely large cooler, at least if you remove it you're still left with the as-intended short card.
  • FlushedBubblyJock - Thursday, July 16, 2015 - link

    can you even believe the 390x is at $429 and $469 and $479 ... the rebrand over 2.5 years old or so... i mean AMD has GONE NUTS.
  • akamateau - Sunday, July 12, 2015 - link

    @Ryan Smith

    Hmmm.

    You ran a whole suite of synthetic Benchmarks yet you completely ignored DX12 Starswarm and 3dMarks API Overhead test.

    The question that I have is why did you omit DX12 benchmarks?

    Starswarm is NOW COMPLETE AND MATURE.

    It is also NOT synthetic but rather a full length game simulation; but you know this.

    3dMark is synthetic but it is THE prime indicator of the CPU to GPU data pipeline performance.

    They are also all we have right now to adequately judge the value of a $549 dollar AMD GPU vs a $649 nVidia GPU for new games coming up.

    Since better than 50% of games released this Christmas will be DX12 don't you think that consumers have a right to know how well a high performance API will work with a dGPU card designed to run on both Mantle and DX12?

    AMD did not position Fiji for DX11. This card IS designed for DX12 and Mantle.

    So show us how well it does.
  • Ryan Smith - Monday, July 13, 2015 - link

    The Star Swarm benchmark is, by design, a proof of concept. It is meant to showcase the benefits of DX12/Mantle as it applies to draw calls, not to compare the gaming performance of video cards.

    Furthermore the latest version is running a very old version of the engine that has seen many changes. We will not be able to include any Oxide engine games until Ashes of the Singularity (which looks really good, by the way) is out of beta.

    Finally, the 3DMark API Overhead test is not supposed to be used to compare video cards from different vendors. From the technical guide: "The API Overhead feature test is not a general-purpose GPU benchmark, and it should not be used to compare graphics cards from different vendors."
  • FlushedBubblyJock - Thursday, July 16, 2015 - link

    " Since better than 50% of games released this Christmas will be DX12 "
    I'LL BET YOU A GRAND THAT DOES NOT HAPPEN.

    It's always the amd fanboy future, with the svengali ESP blabbed in for full on PR BS...
  • akamateau - Sunday, July 12, 2015 - link

    @Ryan Smith

    Do you also realise that Fiji completely outclasses Maxwell and Tesla as well?

    Gaming is a sideshow. AMD is positioning Fury x to sell for $350+ as a single unit silicon for HPC. With HBM on the package!!!

    HPGPU computing is now up for grabs. Compaing the Fiji PACKAGE to the Maxwell or Tesla PACKAGE has AMD thoroughly outclassing the Professional Workstation and HPC silicon.

    HBM stacked memory can be configured as cache and still feed GDDR5 RAM for multiple monitors.

    AMD has several patents for just that while using HBM stacked memory.

    I think that AMD is quietly positioning Fiji and Greenland next for High Performance Computing.

    Fury X2 with 17 Tflps of single precision and almost 8Tflops dual precison is going to change the cluster server market.

    Of course Fury X2 will rock this Christmas.

    What will be the release price? I think less than $999!!!

    AMD has made a habit of being the grinch that stole nVidias Christmas.
  • Ryan Smith - Monday, July 13, 2015 - link

    Note that Fiji is not expected to appear in any HPC systems. It has no ECC, minimal speed FP64, and only 4GB of VRAM. HPC users are generally after processors with large amounts of memory and ECC, and frequently FP64 as well.

    AMD's HPC product for this cycle is the FirePro S9170, a 32GB Hawaii card: http://www.amd.com/en-us/products/graphics/server/...
  • FlushedBubblyJock - Thursday, July 16, 2015 - link

    ROFLMAO delusion after delusion...
  • loguerto - Sunday, July 12, 2015 - link

    Looking at what happened with the old generation AMD and nvidia gpus, i wouldn't be surprised if after a few driver updates the fiji will be so ahead of maxwell. AMD always improved it's old architectures with software updates while nvidia quite never did that, actually they downgrade their old gpus so that they can sell their next overpriced SoC.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now