Hitman

The final game in our 2016 benchmark suite is the 2016 edition of Hitman, the latest title in the stealth-action franchise. The game offers two rendering paths: DirectX 11 and DirectX 12, with the latter being the case of DirectX 12 being added after the fact. As with past Hitman games, the latest proves to have a good mix of scenery and high model counts to stress modern video cards.

Hitman - 3840x2160 - Ultra Quality

Hitman - 2560x1440 - Ultra Quality

Hitman - 1920x1080 - Ultra Quality

Because Hitman supports both DX11 and DX12, for the moment we’ve gone ahead and benchmarked it with both. In practice the performance impact of DX12 is very mixed; NVIDIA cards prior to Pascal lose performance and Pascal cards can either gain or lose performance. AMD cards on the other hand tend to gain performance. The image quality is the same with both renderers, so it’s simply a matter of picking the render path that produces the best performance for a given card.

In any case, the GTX 1080 continues to top the charts here. 60fps still isn’t attainable at 4K, but it can deliver a reasonably playable 49fps. Alternatively, at 1440p it does better than 85fps. Meanwhile the GTX 1070 isn’t a great option at 4K, but at 1440p it can easily stay north of 60fps, delivering 69.4fps.

Thanks in part to the DX12 code path, this is another game where the GTX 1070 performs as expected versus GTX 1080, but still can’t hold on to second place. Rather the Radeon Fury X takes second place at all but 1080p.

Looking at our generational comparisons one last time, this final game has the Pascal cards performing better than expected. At 1440p and above, the GTX 1080 hits 86% better performance than the GTX 980 under DirectX 11, and the GTX 1070 bests the GTX 970 by an average of 63% in the same circumstances. As best as I can tell, there is just something about the Pascal cards that is slightly more in tune with this game than was the Maxwell 2 cards, leading to the performance we’re seeing here. Otherwise the gap between the GTX 1080 and GTX 1070 is pretty typical at about 25% at the higher resolutions.

Finally, in our last time checking in on the GTX 680, the GTX 1080 offers a commanding performance improvement. GTX 1080 is 4.1x faster than GTX 680 under DirectX 11, reinforcing just how much progress NVIDIA had made in 4 years and a single full manufacturing node upgrade.

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  • TallestJon96 - Wednesday, July 20, 2016 - link

    Still Waiting on that 960 review :)

    All kidding aside I'm I'm sure Il'll enjoy this review. Probably buy a 1080 in 2-3 weeks
  • Sandcat - Thursday, July 21, 2016 - link

    Mea culpa.
  • Armus19 - Thursday, July 21, 2016 - link

    Could you pretty please do the usual HTPC credentials test for 1070, 1080 and 1060 and RX 480 as well pretty please? Otherwise a great review.
  • Xajel - Thursday, July 21, 2016 - link

    I hope to add to this list a new revisit for Hardware Decoding+Encoding capabilities for these new GPU's in comparison to Intel QuickSync and pure Software solutions...
  • JBVertexx - Friday, July 22, 2016 - link

    Still waiting..... I've been checking all afternoon.....
  • JBVertexx - Friday, July 22, 2016 - link

    For the 1060 review, that is.....
  • colinisation - Wednesday, July 20, 2016 - link

    Lovely stuff as always chaps, to the complaints quality takes time.

    There goes my evening.
  • i4mt3hwin - Wednesday, July 20, 2016 - link

    "As of the time this paragraph was written, Newegg only has a single GTX 1080 in stock, a Founders Edition card at $499."

    Should be $699
  • osxandwindows - Wednesday, July 20, 2016 - link

    Finally!
  • jsntech - Wednesday, July 20, 2016 - link

    Nice review.

    On page /30 (Power, Temp, etc.):

    "...there is a real increate in power..."

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