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 (DX11)

Hitman - 2560x1440 - Ultra Quality (DX11)

Wrapping things up on the gaming side, we have Hitman. While several DX11 games have added DX12 over the last year, Hitman is perhaps the most interesting case both for driver optimization purposes, and just what the developers have been able to wring out. For the latest generation of cards, the game’s DX12 performance is more or less a wash; it’s not consistently better than DX11 in GPU-bound scenarios. However once we get CPU-bound, the threading and CPU overhead improvements of DX12 make themselves felt, improving performance on even the all-powerful GTX 1080 Ti at 1440p.

By the numbers then, under DX12 the GTX 1080 Ti picks up 24% over the GTX 1080, which is actually a smaller than average gain. Against the GTX 980 Ti however, NVIDIA’s latest card leads by 83%, making for a very strong generational improvement.

Grand Theft Auto V Compute
Comments Locked

161 Comments

View All Comments

  • deathtollwrx - Wednesday, April 19, 2017 - link

    I upgraded from a
    Asus 1080GTX 8oc and it made a huge difference for me.

    OW was 110 fps now running about 155
  • OldManMcNasty - Friday, March 10, 2017 - link

    Ok is it me but why are all the games old AF? AND why is the 800-pound gorilla named BF1 missing from just about every review?
  • stardude82 - Friday, March 10, 2017 - link

    Quick search pulls up many BF1 benchmarks for the 1080 Ti...
  • bill44 - Friday, March 10, 2017 - link

    Thanks Ryan, nice review.
    Still missing info/specs on Audio (inc. supported sampling rates), which, I suspect, you still not have at hand.
    I have asked about this in the past.
  • hughw - Saturday, March 11, 2017 - link

    Does the 1080 Ti have dual DMA channels as the Titan X does?
  • MarkieGcolor - Saturday, March 11, 2017 - link

    Nvidia is so gay. I don't understand why people complain that intel's chips slowly optimize over the years. You seriously want your hardware to depreciate 50% every year?
  • Meteor2 - Tuesday, March 14, 2017 - link

    That's one way to look at it! But lose the homophobia.
  • prateekprakash - Sunday, March 12, 2017 - link

    Hi,
    After going through the well written review, I think: wouldn't it be nice if AIB partners (atleast one of them) released a blower type card with 3 slots, so that it could include a heftier heatsink, yet exhaust heat out? That way I could consider putting it in a congested chassis and not worrying about thermal throttling. PS: here in India, my zotac gtx 1060 mini reaches 78° c even in open air!
  • PocketNuke - Monday, March 13, 2017 - link

    GP106-GP102 have the same 4x int8 performance according to this article:
    https://devblogs.nvidia.com/parallelforall/mixed-p...
  • panicp - Sunday, October 15, 2017 - link

    I have a GTX 1080Ti and to date, I've been using FSX which apparently devotes more use to the CPU than the GPU. I've just loaded P3D - and it really does look super smooth. The temp maxed out around 85 degs - and my monitoring software was having kittens showing me temps in the RED zone.

    Can thus GPU continue to run at this temp indefinitely? For unlimited hours?

    Is it going to damage the card in the long run?

    I'd appreciate your kind advice.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now