DiRT Rally

For the racing game in our benchmark suite we have Codemasters’ DiRT Rally. Codemasters continues to set the bar for graphical fidelity in racing games, delivering realistic looking environments with layered with additional graphical effects. Based on their in-house EGO engine, DiRT Rally includes a number of DirectCompute based compute shader effects, and while it’s not the most punishing game in our suite, it still takes a very good card to sustain the 60fps frame rate that driving games are best played at.

DiRT Rally - 3840x2160 - Ultra Quality

DiRT Rally - 2560x1440 - Ultra Quality

With DiRT Rally, the GTX 1080 was already capable of breaking 60fps at 4K, so the GTX 1080 Ti just adds to the lead here. Though it’s not for naught; with high refresh rate 4K monitors due a bit later this year, the GTX 1080 Ti will be a good match. Otherwise for high refresh rate 1440p monitors, the GTX 1080 Ti is the first card that should be able to peg those monitors at their full 144Hz refresh rate.

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  • mapesdhs - Saturday, March 11, 2017 - link

    It would be delayed for a month by their Customs lunacy. :D
  • Meteor2 - Tuesday, March 14, 2017 - link

    I'd love to see an Anandtech investigation of what pairings of CPU and GPU really do give the best FPS/price ratio. Could a 1080 Ti bottleneck an i5, for an example? Would a 7600 be ok but a 2500 choke?
  • Gc - Thursday, March 9, 2017 - link

    Do Re Mi Fa So La Ti ....
    "Ti" is a clever marketing name for a penultimate card.
    11GB further emphasizes that it is leading buyers toward the ultimate.
  • Ranger1065 - Friday, March 10, 2017 - link

    Great review, well done Anandtech.
  • TheJian - Friday, March 10, 2017 - link

    Should be interesting to see how AMD does with 8GB for Vega.

    Looks like the best Vega can hope for is a tie and they themselves (Raja) said they only had enough software engineers to be working on Vulkan drivers. So that means Dx11/OpenGL and possible DX12 won't be very good, or could take ages to catch up if AMD doesn't make some money to hire more people. I really hope Vega launch doesn't end up like Ryzen (motherboards all over the place having issues, and SMT etc issues in games). I think I'll wait out Vega and maybe even 1080r2 with GDDR5x & faster clocks before jumping. Also have to wait for AMD to fix ryzen if they can. At least the motherboard part, as sites like PCper think the game part will stay the same forever. AMD talking Ryzen rev2 already (that fixes things) makes me think PCper etc are correct.

    Still, an exciting time for hardware and a great time to buy a PC this year. Even the low end is getting a major boost probably. The 1060 is low to me no point in spending under $200 if you want to really game IMHO, faster speeds, GDDR5x, could be interesting. That combo could make a really great HTPC. I wonder how much faster 1060 will get. Pity it seems AMD has no access to GDDR5x as nvidia is using it all.

    Just read Hardocp's review, 30-35% faster than 1080. Much the same as here. AMD has a rough road ahead (so do their shareholders). That said, competition is good :)
  • Ken_g6 - Friday, March 10, 2017 - link

    Hm, 11GB RAM, 11Gbps, 11.3 TFLOPs. Why do I get the impression Marketing wanted to use the phrase "goes to eleven" for this card? Did they announce it with Spinal Tap music?
  • Ryan Smith - Saturday, March 11, 2017 - link

    They did not. Though clearly they should have.
  • mapesdhs - Saturday, March 11, 2017 - link

    Even SGI did this. IIRC:

    "audiopanel -spinaltap"

    Changes the scale to 11. :D
  • oranos - Friday, March 10, 2017 - link

    pretty meh if you own a gtx 1080 already. higher TDP, lower base clocks.
  • justaviking - Friday, March 10, 2017 - link

    30% faster is "meh"?

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