Crysis 3

Still one of our most punishing benchmarks 3 years later, Crysis 3 needs no introduction. Crytek’s DX11 masterpiece, Crysis 3’s Very High settings still punish even the best of video cards, never mind the rest. Along with its high performance requirements, Crysis 3 is a rather balanced game in terms of power consumption and vendor optimizations. As a result it can give us a good look at how our video cards stack up on average, and later on in this article how power consumption plays out.

Crysis 3 - 2560x1440 - Very High Quality + FXAA

Crysis 3 - 1920x1080 - Very High Quality + FXAA

Whereas Battlefield 4 was rather forgiving to the GTX 1060 at even 1440p, Crysis 3 is the opposite. While over 30fps, 42fps leaves a long way to go before hitting the all-important 60fps fluidity mark for this FPS. At 1080p on the other hand it has no trouble sustaining over 60fps. This does, however, end up being one of the only games where GTX 1060 isn’t neck-and-neck with GTX 980. Even the factory overclocked ASUS card is a bit off of GTX 980, though it’s still 4% ahead of the stock GTX 1060.

Compared to the GTX 1070 then, the GTX 1060 delivers fairly typical performance at 73% of its faster sibling. Versus GTX 960 this is a 71% performance gain, which is actually the smallest performance gain we’ll see throughout our entire benchmark suite. On which note, looking farther down the charts we have to compare GTX 1060 against GTX 660 to find a better than 2x performance increase.

Finally, against the RX 480, GTX 1060 once again delivers a 14% performance gain versus its closest competition.

Battlefield 4 The Witcher 3
Comments Locked

189 Comments

View All Comments

  • fanofanand - Saturday, August 6, 2016 - link

    You keep saying that but there are no 1060s that can be bought for $249. MSRP is meaningless when none sell at that price.
  • eddman - Saturday, August 6, 2016 - link

    ...and you keep at it as if it isn't the same with 480s. I just looked for 8GB 480s on newegg. All out-of-stock except for one model that is going for $400!!!

    I suppose you've never heard of shortages. There are $250 1060s. They simply sell as soon as they get restocked.
  • Dr. Swag - Friday, August 5, 2016 - link

    Any word on the progress of the rx 480 review? I haven't seen any good dives on the Polaris architecture so I'm really stoked on your review!
  • Ryan Smith - Friday, August 5, 2016 - link

    I want to do a bit more on the Polaris architecture, but it will have to wait until after RX 470 and RX 460.
  • Dr. Swag - Friday, August 5, 2016 - link

    Ah OK. Thanks for the response!
  • xenol - Friday, August 5, 2016 - link

    Anyone else chuckle at the heatsinks past the fan that apparently aren't attached to anything?
  • DanNeely - Friday, August 5, 2016 - link

    Yeah those stubs are cosmetic; but there's not much to them either.

    Tom's has a detailed teardown of the cooler. A few ornamental fins on the front edge with the entire actual heatsink between the blower and case exhaust holes. The 1080's is about the same.

    http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/nvidia-geforce...
    http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/nvidia-geforce...
  • tipoo - Friday, August 5, 2016 - link

    Pretty funny, main heatsink comes off and that little heatsink nub remains. Maybe it manipulates airflow to the fan, at most? Or, more likely, it's just cosmetic to make this look like a bigger GPU.
  • Mr Perfect - Friday, August 5, 2016 - link

    When you inevitably do a custom card round up, could you please get some blower style fully exhausting cards in there? It would be immensely helpful for the SFF crowd who can't stuff a tipple fan behemoth in the case, much less dump 120 watts of heat in there. Off hand, Asus has the Turbo, Gainward has one and Galax has another.
  • fanofanand - Friday, August 5, 2016 - link

    When was the last time Anandtech did a custom card roundup? They don't really do that sort of thing anymore.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now