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

 

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  • JasonMZW20 - Thursday, April 20, 2017 - link

    Tile-based rendering does wonders for power consumption. AMD is still doing full scene rendering, which is expensive and inefficient.

    Vega will join the TBR party. We'll see if power consumption has dropped significantly then.

    But, isn't that the general rule when you OC? Throw power saving out the window. I have my old R9 280 at 1200MHz. Draws about 230W. Don't really care.
  • Tewt - Tuesday, April 18, 2017 - link

    I was hoping to read something about Freesync 2 and moreso now after reading the review to find the performance gains weren't as exciting and not without caveats. Since there currently are no Freesync 2 monitors though, there is no point in reviewing this feature. It would have been a nice value added feature to help offset the minimal gains in performance. Too bad AMD couldn't capitalize on this feature to make this release more exciting.
  • Cygni - Tuesday, April 18, 2017 - link

    Keeping the memory specs down will help them move to undercutting the 1060 on price, which they will need to do pretty heartily to get some sales volume. Hopefully this is enough to encourage Nvidia into a price war, as they have been milking the 1060's pricepoint pretty heavily for a long time now. Other than a brief dip to the $210 range on black friday, prices have stayed pretty high on 6GB cards.
  • brucek2 - Tuesday, April 18, 2017 - link

    Most of us learn as small children the peril of crying wolf. You'll get a lot of attention the first time you do it, but if there's no actual wolf you'll soon get a bad reputation and no further attention.

    AMD is crying wolf here. These are not new generation products. The new numbering is essentially a lie. I still very much want there to be a real competitor to Nvidia / Intel, but crud like this is not making it easy to root for them.
  • fanofanand - Tuesday, April 18, 2017 - link

    New to the tech world? This is pretty standard stuff after a new arch. Nvidia has done it several times as have AMD. Guess what, Intel and AMD do it with their CPUs too. Oh my, looks like it happens with mobile SOCs too.
  • haukionkannel - Wednesday, April 19, 2017 - link

    It is norm to have rebrands by both makers. Same is true to cpus even more...
  • tipoo - Thursday, April 20, 2017 - link

    They were pretty clear early on that it was just an overclock of the 480, and that's what it is. Not sure what people expected. Would 485 be a better name? Probably, but that's the GPU world for ya.
  • AbbieHoffman - Tuesday, April 18, 2017 - link

    And yet the old R9 290X and R9 390X are still better cards.
  • sonichedgehog36 - Tuesday, April 18, 2017 - link

    Typo: TBPs on page one.
  • sonichedgehog36 - Tuesday, April 18, 2017 - link

    Please delete the post above.

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