Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus (Vulkan)

id Software is popularly known for a few games involving shooting stuff until it dies, just with different 'stuff' for each one: Nazis, demons, or other players while scorning the laws of physics. Wolfenstein II is the latest of the first, the sequel of a modern reboot series developed by MachineGames and built on id Tech 6. While the tone is significantly less pulpy nowadays, the game is still a frenetic FPS at heart, succeeding DOOM as a modern Vulkan flagship title and arriving as a pure Vullkan implementation rather than the originally OpenGL DOOM.

Featuring a Nazi-occupied America of 1961, Wolfenstein II is lushly designed yet not oppressively intensive on the hardware, something that goes well with its pace of action that emerge suddenly from a level design flush with alternate historical details.

The highest quality preset, "Mein leben!", was used. Wolfenstein II also features Vega-centric GPU Culling and Rapid Packed Math, as well as Radeon-centric Deferred Rendering; in accordance with the preset, neither GPU Culling nor Deferred Rendering was enabled.

Wolfenstein II 1920x1080 2560x1440 3840x2160
Average FPS
99th Percentile

I am actually impressed with Wolfenstein II and its Vulkan implementation more than the absurd 250+ framerates, if only because many other games hold back the GPU because of the occurring CPU bottleneck. In DOOM, there was a hard 200fps cap because of engine/implementation limitations, a bit of a corner case, but manufacturers make 240Hz monitors nowadays, too. On a GPU performance profiling side, of course, reducing the CPU bottleneck makes comparing powerful GPUs much easier at 1080p, and with a better signal-to-noise than at 4K.

This is combined with the fact that at 4K, the 20 series are looking a huge 60 to 68% lead over the 10 series, and we'll be cross-referencing these performance deltas with other sections of the game. Even in the case of a 'flat-track bully' scenario where the 2080 Ti is running up the score, the 2080 Ti's speed compared to the 2080 is somewhat less than expected at 24 to 27%. It's a somewhat intriguing result for an optimized Vulkan game, as the game runs and scales generally well across the board; It's also not unnoticed that both the RX Vega cards and GeForce Turing cards outperform their expected positions, though without the graphics workload details it's hard to speculate with substance. With framerates like these, the 4K HDR dream at 144 Hz is a real possibility, and it would be interesting to compare with Titan V and Titan Xp results.

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  • tamalero - Wednesday, September 19, 2018 - link

    Unlike a video card, DVD were a STANDARD. set to replace the DVD. This wasn't a war between BETAMAX and VHS again. It was an evolution.
    And as you said it, they had a few titles coming on.
    Nvidia currently is offering ZERO options for what they charge insanely.

    Even those 4k TVs you mentioned.. had demos and downlodable content.
    It was the future.

    Nvidia's game in some of these RTX features are solely of Nvidia, not a global standard.
  • tamalero - Wednesday, September 19, 2018 - link

    Errata: set to replace the "CDS" not DVDs.. They do really need an edit button here.
  • Writer's Block - Monday, October 1, 2018 - link

    Not a great comparrison.
    Mainly because: games making use of RTX and othe new features is: Zero.
    OlED and 4k/DVD/Blue: pretty much zero/extremely small/dozen or so - not of the aforementioned is as low as zero, so the consumer could see what they were getting.
  • boozed - Wednesday, September 19, 2018 - link

    Early adopters have always paid over the odds for an immature experience. That's the decision they make. You pays your money and you takes your chances...
  • Gastec - Thursday, September 27, 2018 - link

    Yes, drug addicts would also agree
  • ianmills - Wednesday, September 19, 2018 - link

    RTX - Radeon technology cross off the list. Nvidia is free to price as they please XD
  • NikosD - Wednesday, September 19, 2018 - link

    1080 Ti vs 980 Ti ~ 70% for 50$ more MSRP

    1080 vs 980 ~ 60% for 50$ more MSRP

    2080 Ti vs 1080 Ti ~ 30% for 300$ more MSRP (actual price difference is a lot more)

    Please, let's boycott Turing cards.

    nVidia must learn its lesson.

    Skip it.
  • V900 - Wednesday, September 19, 2018 - link

    If you look at AMDs Vega and compare it with the previous AMD flagship: Fury, you see a similar 30-40% increase in performance.

    In other words: This isn’t Nvidia wanting to rip gamers off, it’s just a consequence of GPU makers pushing up against the end of Moore’s law.
  • formulaLS - Wednesday, September 19, 2018 - link

    It IS nVidia wanting to rip off gamers. Their prices are absolutely a huge rip off for what you get.
  • DigitalFreak - Wednesday, September 19, 2018 - link

    Blame AMD for not competing. Nvidia would never be able to do this if AMD had a competitive offering.

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