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: Inquisition - 1920x1080 - Ultra Quality - 0x MSAA

Compared to the R9 Fury series, the R9 Nano delivers around 87-95% of the performance of AMD’s other flagship cards, once again similar to what we’ve seen in prior games and showing just how close the R9 Nano is to the R9 Fury is in performance so much of the time. Meanwhile in a size-wise comparison the R9 Nano always holds the lead as well, though the lead gets rather thin – around 7% - at 1920x1080.

The big hurdle for the R9 Nano is the power comparison, which once again sees the power-similar GTX 980 eeking out AMD’s latest Fiji card, especially at lower resolutions. Nothing here is all that surprising given what we saw with R9 Fury back in July, but it’s a reminder of how close things can be in some of these games.

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  • gw74 - Friday, September 11, 2015 - link

    Everything you say here is refuted by my previous comment.
  • slickr - Saturday, September 12, 2015 - link

    LOL. Either you are one of the biggest dumbasses out there or a shill yourself. To believe it was a "honest mistake" is like believing the earth is made out of cheese.

    They had at least 2 months to fix it and to rectify it, did they not read any of the hundred of reviews? They tried to cover it up and it was only when average CONSUMERS started noticing it and testing it that it was found out it had been a major fraud.
  • gw74 - Saturday, September 12, 2015 - link

    insulting me, setting up a false dichotomy and a false analogy will not help you.

    They did not realise there had been an error during those 2 months, and none of the reviews mentioned it, because it does not noticeably affect performance except in certain SLI / 4K low framerate edge cases. It was only when until users starting reporting it in mid Jan. They had meetings between marketing and engineering then released a statement to PCPer on 24th Jan.
  • Oxford Guy - Tuesday, September 15, 2015 - link

    Nvidia continued to lie to the public on its website by stating that the 970 has 224 GB/s, long after Anandtech's Correcting the Specs article was published — which made it clear enough that the card can't reach that number. Quit shilling.
  • Alexvrb - Saturday, September 12, 2015 - link

    Err, uh, the engineers only communicate in binary! The translator was sick that week! Locusts! It wasn't their fault!!

    Reality: "Well technically it has 4GB on there so we'll just... leave that detail out... they won't notice for months anyway. Then we'll apologize and a bunch of fanboys will defend us till the bitter end anyway."

    If AMD had pulled a stunt like that they would have been raked through the coals till there were only ashes.
  • gw74 - Saturday, September 12, 2015 - link

    no. that is not "reality". That is speculation.
  • bigboxes - Thursday, September 10, 2015 - link

    Utter nonsense. Nvidia knew damn well that they had a technical and marketing issue and lied through their teeth. Misleading reviewers, customers and the general tech community. It eventually came out and they went into full damage control. And before you say it, I bought an MSI GTX 970 Gaming 4G card after all this went down. I'm happy with this card, but it is what it is.
  • gw74 - Friday, September 11, 2015 - link

    you forgot to include evidence of them lying, or a reason for why they would lie.
  • Oxford Guy - Friday, September 11, 2015 - link

    It's called reality, dude.
  • gw74 - Friday, September 11, 2015 - link

    meaningless

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