The Division

The final first person shooter in our benchmark suite, The Division is a online-only game powered by Ubisoft’s Snowdrop engine. The game’s design focuses on detailed urban environments and utilizes dynamic global illumination for parts of its lighting. For our testing we use the game’s built-in benchmark, which cycles through a number of scenes/areas of the game.

The Division - 2560x1440 - Ultra Quality

The Division - 1920x1080 - Ultra Quality

For whatever reason, the GTX 980 has always hit above its weight in The Division, and as a result this is the one game where the GTX 1060 can’t stay at parity with the one-time NVIDIA flagship. In fact this is another case where the GTX 1060 can’t quite muster 60fps at 1080p, falling just short at 58.9fps. However the ASUS card does get to do what the reference card cannot, with its factory overclock adding another 7% to the total.

Meanwhile compared to the AMD competition, this is the second instance of GTX 1060 and RX 480 coming in virtually tied. At both 1440p and 1080p the cards are off by less than 1fps, so while GTX 1060 is typically comfortably ahead of AMD’s best, that’s not always the case.

Finally, compared to the GTX 960 we’re looking at a 73% performance gain. Past that, the generational gains get especially large; by the time we’re looking at GTX 660, GTX 1060 delivers more than 3x the performance.

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  • Raniz - Saturday, August 6, 2016 - link

    Good review, though I must say that calling it a review of a $249 MSRP card when neither of the cards actually reviewed has an MSRP of $249 is a bit weird.

    I think you should have at least one card that is actually priced at $249 in the review, even if the FE is supposed to be exactly the same as those cards.
  • Nephelai - Saturday, August 6, 2016 - link

    Never been a tin foil hat guy but I'm starting to believe nvidia is holding first borns on threat of including a GTX 980 TI or two in SLI in any review.
  • MarkieGcolor - Saturday, August 6, 2016 - link

    Yes! The GPU market is wacked
  • Sushisamurai - Saturday, August 6, 2016 - link

    I feel sorry for you Ryan. So much work out put in and yet there's still so many people that blast you and Anandtech as if you owe the vendors and readers "timely" reviews. Don't let it get to you guys - they'll still come and read just like I do, as your site offers something many don't.

    Anyways, back on topic, I feel the MRSP is a little BS In Canada, Newegg sells the products at ~$280 USD (1 SKU), with the Asus Strix @~$330 (other SKU's listed >$330). For $100 over the 480 in CAD (only reference boards available ATM) that 1060's perf/$ is too intense, almost priced at the next bracket (1070's only $50-$100 off the 1060 price, might as well get the 1070 then). Neat to see the 1060 #'s in action, too bad there's a limit on overvolting and TDP for over clocking.
  • IKeelU - Saturday, August 6, 2016 - link

    This review really needed some Doom vulkan to paint a more accurate picture of how these cards will perform in the future. I understand that Anandtech will expand on this review later on, but many of us are buying cards now (well, trying to at least).
  • Simplex - Sunday, August 7, 2016 - link

    I'd love to see more Vulkan based, but how realistic is it? How many games were announced to use Vulkan?
    How popular was Vulkan's predecessor (OpenGL) in the past?
  • Tech-Curious - Wednesday, August 10, 2016 - link

    Problem is that the nVidia optimizations for Doom Vulkan haven't even been attempted yet. You can find a bunch of reviews that show the 480 blowing the 1060 out of the water in Doom Vulkan, but we really don't know how representative those results are.

    Those results are very encouraging for the 480 though, just in general performance terms.
  • Tech-Curious - Wednesday, August 10, 2016 - link

    Correction, the quote I had in mind references async compute specifically. From Bethesda's Doom Vulkan FAQ:

    "Does DOOM support asynchronous compute when running on the Vulkan API?

    Asynchronous compute is a feature that provides additional performance gains on top of the baseline id Tech 6 Vulkan feature set.

    Currently asynchronous compute is only supported on AMD GPUs and requires DOOM Vulkan supported drivers to run. We are working with NVIDIA to enable asynchronous compute in Vulkan on NVIDIA GPUs. We hope to have an update soon."

    https://community.bethesda.net/thread/54585?tstart...
  • eddman - Saturday, August 6, 2016 - link

    Thanks for the review. I hope to see an HTPC review down the line, with a short 1060 or the upcoming 1050 (/Ti?).
  • jackbutler - Saturday, August 6, 2016 - link

    Could we please see a review of the new HEVC/H265 encoding performance of GTX1060 vs RX480?

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