Civilization 6

First up in our CPU gaming tests is Civilization 6. Originally penned by Sid Meier and his team, the Civ series of turn-based strategy games are a cult classic, and many an excuse for an all-nighter trying to get Gandhi to declare war on you due to an integer overflow. Truth be told I never actually played the first version, but every edition from the second to the sixth, including the fourth as voiced by the late Leonard Nimoy, it a game that is easy to pick up, but hard to master.

Benchmarking Civilization has always been somewhat of an oxymoron – for a turn based strategy game, the frame rate is not necessarily the important thing here and even in the right mood, something as low as 5 frames per second can be enough. With Civilization 6 however, Firaxis went hardcore on visual fidelity, trying to pull you into the game. As a result, Civilization can taxing on graphics and CPUs as we crank up the details, especially in DirectX 12.

Perhaps a more poignant benchmark would be during the late game, when in the older versions of Civilization it could take 20 minutes to cycle around the AI players before the human regained control. The new version of Civilization has an integrated ‘AI Benchmark’, although it is not currently part of our benchmark portfolio yet, due to technical reasons which we are trying to solve. Instead, we run the graphics test, which provides an example of a mid-game setup at our settings.

At both 1920x1080 and 4K resolutions, we run the same settings. Civilization 6 has sliders for MSAA, Performance Impact and Memory Impact. The latter two refer to detail and texture size respectively, and are rated between 0 (lowest) to 5 (extreme). We run our Civ6 benchmark in position four for performance (ultra) and 0 on memory, with MSAA set to 2x.

For reviews where we include 8K and 16K benchmarks (Civ6 allows us to benchmark extreme resolutions on any monitor) on our GTX 1080, we run the 8K tests similar to the 4K tests, but the 16K tests are set to the lowest option for Performance.

All of our benchmark results can also be found in our benchmark engine, Bench.

MSI GTX 1080 Gaming 8G Performance


1080p

4K

8K
 
16K
 

ASUS GTX 1060 Strix 6G Performance


1080p

4K

Sapphire Nitro R9 Fury 4G Performance


1080p

4K

Sapphire Nitro RX 480 8G Performance


1080p

4K

On the whole, the Threadripper CPUs perform as well as Ryzen does on most of the tests, although the Time Under analysis always seems to look worse for Threadripper.

Benchmarking Performance: CPU Legacy Tests CPU Gaming Performance: Ashes of the Singularity Escalation (1080p, 4K)
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  • Ian Cutress - Thursday, August 10, 2017 - link

    We ran with both and give the data for both. Gaming Mode is not default, and it may surprise you just how many systems are still run at default settings.
  • mapesdhs - Thursday, August 10, 2017 - link

    Just a thought, might it be possible for AMD to include logic in the design which can tell when it's doing something would probably run better in the other mode, and if so notify the user of this?
  • zepi - Thursday, August 10, 2017 - link

    Which 7-zip version are you actually using? Do you really run version 9.2 as stated in the article?

    Latest stable should be something like 16.x and 17.x's are also available.
  • zepi - Thursday, August 10, 2017 - link

    Your numbers look somewhat different compared to some sites that have been using 17.x versions.
  • DanNeely - Thursday, August 10, 2017 - link

    Keeping the version constant means you can compare against a huge backlog of old data without having to rerun anything and having to drop any systems you can't get working or were only loaners.
  • Alexey291 - Thursday, August 10, 2017 - link

    Yes and also means that the results are useless.
  • tamalero - Thursday, August 10, 2017 - link

    Agree. Its like running a benchmark suit that cant handle more than 8 threads.. because "back in the days" there were only dual core processors.
  • Johan Steyn - Thursday, August 10, 2017 - link

    Its called slanted journalism, just another example.
  • zepi - Friday, August 11, 2017 - link

    Exactly. We don't test GPU's with Quake 2 only to have comparable benchmark results against Voodoo 3.

    And almost no-one running 7zip today (be it on Core 2 quad OR Core i9) won't be running these ancient versions. Results on those versions are just meaningless in todays environment.
  • zepi - Friday, August 11, 2017 - link

    princess and half a kingdom for functional edit.

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