The Division

The final first person shooter in our benchmark suite, The Division is a multiplayer-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 - 3840x2160 - Ultra Quality

The Division - 2560x1440 - Ultra Quality

Unlike The Witcher, NVIDIA won’t be able to hit 60fps with the GTX 1080 Ti at 4K, but at 54.7fps, they come close. Otherwise at 1440p, there’s performance to spare, which should make high refresh rate monitor owners happy.

On a relative basis, this is another strong game for the GTX 1080 Ti. The card picks up 34% over the GTX 1080, and 71% over the GTX 980 Ti. And for those GTX 780 Ti owners still out there, we’re looking at a pretty consistent 2.6x increase in performance across all resolutions.

The Witcher 3 Grand Theft Auto V
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  • ddriver - Friday, March 10, 2017 - link

    Yeah, also amd was free to offer discounts to those who didn't sell intel products. They helped make two games, and gave Larry who only sells amd systems a free amd t-shirt as a reward. Because that's what amd can afford, after years of being sandbagged by intel and Hecktor made it buy ati for 3 times what it was worth so it can go bankrupt so it will be forced to sell its fabs to Hecktor's arab boyfriends.
  • eddman - Friday, March 10, 2017 - link

    You did not answer the question.

    Being known in the industry for many years, yet nothing has happened.
  • ddriver - Friday, March 10, 2017 - link

    What nvidia does is the same thing as lobying. It is legalized bribe. You cannot give a briefcase of money to a politician and tell him to do what you want him to. But you can spend a briefcase of money to make a politician do what you want him to do. And it is not illegal, politicians have legalized it, and as far as they and the lobbyists are concerned, that is a good thing, a political contribution.

    The same kind of advantage that allows nvidia to do that is what would give them the upper hand in court. It could be proven to be a crime, if only amd had enough money to out-sue nvidia. Which they don't. And if they did, they'd be able to support game developers, so it wouldn't even come to that. nvidia is friends with the big boys, amd is a perpetual underdog. In such scenarios, even if a lawsuit was to take place, it would be mostly a show for the public, and if found guilty, the punishment would be a symbolic and gentle slap on the wrist.

    Now, with your question answered, do you feel better?
  • ddriver - Friday, March 10, 2017 - link

    There is high likelihood that we will see such a case against nvidia, but not until they have completely cemented their dominance position, and that case would only serve to wipe nvidia clean, so they can enjoy their dominance without being haunted by their past of sleazy illegal practices, giving them a clean slate at a very desirable price.
  • eddman - Friday, March 10, 2017 - link

    So it is not illegal to help devs doing optimizations?
  • ddriver - Friday, March 10, 2017 - link

    It can be as legal or illegal as killing people. What nvidia does is most certainly unfair business practices and abuse of its position.

    The legal system is rarely about what is right or wrong. What nvidia does is certainly wrong. If they can get away with it, it is legal. If someone kills your entire family and then walks free because the legal system found him to be innocent, would you be as OK and defending his innocence as you are doing for nvidia?
  • eddman - Friday, March 10, 2017 - link

    That comparison isn't even remotely relevant.

    Companies work with devs in the entire computing industry all the time to make sure software works best with hardware. It has never been illegal.
  • ddriver - Friday, March 10, 2017 - link

    Are you by a chance on the spectrum? There is nothing wrong with helping to optimize software. For the last time - what is wrong is offering that help on implied exclusive terms. I don't know people who have been offered support by amd in exchange of sandbagging nvidia. But I know people who eventually optimized for amd and as a result lost the support nvidia offered prior to that. And the revenge didn't end there either, subsequent driver releases significantly worsened the performance of the already nvidia optimized code.

    nvidia doesn't help out of the kindness of their hearts or awesomeness, they do not even help to make the best out of their hardware, they only help if that would get them an unfair advantage, so it is implied that their help is only available to those who leave the amd rendering pipeline deliberately unoptimized.
  • eddman - Saturday, March 11, 2017 - link

    ...and some other people tell otherwise. Who to believe. Can you provide anything solid to back that up?

    "subsequent driver releases significantly worsened the performance of the already nvidia optimized code"

    Which games? Which drivers? This one can be tested.

    Why would nvidia reduce the performance of a game on their own cards, which is going to hurt them? The whole purpose of this was to make the game work best and sell cards based on that.
  • eddman - Saturday, March 11, 2017 - link

    What about you? Are you on the spectrum?

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