GPU Performance - Vega vs Iris

After many tests, it is very clear that Intel’s Ice Lake platform offers a significantly faster CPU, and the results were unsurprising. Although the Ryzen Mobile 3000 platform did launch in 2019, it already struggled on CPU tests against the older Skylake core processors. But on the GPU side, Intel is the one that needs to play catch-up. Previous to Ice Lake, Intel’s standard GT2 GPU platform, found on almost all U-Series 15-Watt processors, offered 24 execution units of their Gen 9.5 GPU. AMD squeezed their Vega GPU architecture into their Ryzen SoC, which could easily double the performance of the Gen 9.5 GT2 GPU.

Ice Lake is Intel’s first real attempt to make a powerful iGPU a standard feature for their CPUs, although it is only a first step. But the new Gen 11 architecture brings some improvements such as more advanced tile-based rendering, variable rate shading, and of course the LPDDR4X-3733 memory adding significant bandwidth, greatly helping the GPU. The biggest change though is just how much die space Intel has dedicated to graphics, jumping from 24 EUs on a full GT2 to 64 EUs on a full GT2 part such as the Core i7-1065G7. And, following in AMD’s footsteps again, Intel is offering cut-down GPUs on lower-spec processors. It’s confused their already confusing processor naming, but the lowest-spec Core announced so far still has 32 EUs, meaning it is still better than the previous gen even at the “G1” level.

AMD has some tricks up their sleeves as well. For the Surface Laptop 3, Microsoft requested a slightly more powerful configuration for their Surface-branded processor. While the CPU side matches the same specifications as the non-Surface CPUs, Microsoft's processor SKUs add an extra GPU Compute Unit to both its Ryzen 5 and Ryzen 7, bringing them to 9 and 11 respectively. So the Surface Laptop 3 should be the best possible showcase for GPU performance on the 3000 series Ryzen mobile APU.

Before the results, let’s go over the driver situation. The Intel system ships with an updated driver over what we used on the Dell XPS 13 2-in-1, which resolves the 3DMark issues we saw on that laptop. The driver is from 2019-11-06 and is version 26.20.100.7463. The AMD platform’s driver is from 2019-10-07 and is version 26.20.12027.5004. Unfortunately, the AMD driver can’t be updated from AMD directly, and instead will be released by Microsoft. The current driver has some quirks, so an updated driver is needed for usability, but it did not prevent any GPU workloads from being run. But, the AMD system would only output 1280x720 where we normally test at 1366x768, and attempts to output to an external monitor were thwarted by the buggy driver, so be aware that in most of the gaming tests, the AMD system was outputting at a slightly lower resolution.

Let’s see how the do starting with some synthetics, and then moving to some real-world games.

3DMark

Futuremark 3DMark Fire Strike

Futuremark 3DMark Sky Diver

Futuremark 3DMark Cloud Gate

Futuremark 3DMark Ice Storm Unlimited

Futuremark 3DMark Ice Storm Unlimited - Graphics

Futuremark 3DMark Ice Storm Unlimited - Physics

3DMark offers several tests of varying complexity, from Fire Strike as the most demanding, to Ice Storm Unlimited, which can be run on tablets. Here the Ice Lake platform pulls ahead, with better CPU performance helping quite a bit, although the Ice Lake’s Iris Plus graphics is also able to outperform Vega 11 as well.

GFXBench

GFXBench 5.0 Aztec Ruins Normal 1080p Offscreen

GFXBench 5.0 Aztec Ruins High 1440p Offscreen

Kishonti’s latest GFXBench suite added DirectX 12 tests to the fold, making it far more relevant than the older OpenGL versions available on the desktop previously. AMD’s previous work in low-level drivers when they developed Mantle has provided the groundwork for DX12 as well, with Vega 11 offering slightly better results than Iris Plus in this test.

Tomb Raider

Tomb Raider - Value

Running at our value settings, Tomb Raider was easily playable on both systems, with framerates approaching 100 FPS. The Ice Lake platform performed better on this test.

Rise of the Tomb Raider

Rise of the Tomb Raider - Value

The second installment in the Tomb Raider series offers much more demanding visuals, and both systems struggle to play it at our value settings. The DirectX 12 title performs slightly better on Vega, and with some additional settings tweaks, the game would be playable, which is not something you could have said on an integrated GPU previous to Ryzen and Ice Lake.

Strange Brigade

Strange Brigade - Value

A new title we’re bringing to our laptop suite is Strange Brigade, which scales down nicely on integrated graphics. This game also supports DirectX 12, and as tends to be the pattern, performs very well on Vega 11.

F1 2017

F1 2017 - Value

Back with a DirectX 11 title, we see that Intel has again closed the gap, and this game tends to be somewhat CPU bottlenecked as well, so the Sunny Cove cores likely help out here too, but once again Vega 11 wins, if only by a nose.

F1 2019

F1 2019 - Value

Codemasters updated the underlying EGO engine to support DirectX 12, which was utilized on this test. Despite that, the Vega 11 GPU is a bit slower than the Iris Plus in this test.

Far Cry 5

Far Cry 5 - Value

Both systems are within striking distance of being playable, which is somewhat remarkable since the Far Cry series is one of the most popular AAA first-person shooters. The Vega 11 GPU was slightly ahead, which is somewhat surprising as this game tends to be CPU bound, but clearly at this low of a GPU limit that hasn’t come into play yet.

System Performance Benchmark Analysis: Boost Behavior
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  • maroon1 - Sunday, January 12, 2020 - link

    You mean LPDDR4X

    There is big difference between LPDDR4 and LPDDR4X in speed
  • Llawehtdliub - Saturday, December 14, 2019 - link

    Latest Intel CPU vs AMD's year old CPU.

    Doesn't seem very fair.
  • Brett Howse - Saturday, December 14, 2019 - link

    And yet this is what is available as current gen products.
  • m53 - Saturday, December 14, 2019 - link

    It is as fair as comparing 5 year old Skylake with latest Zen2 desktop. The only difference is Skylake actually beats Zen2 if we compare “equal core count” parts. But here Zen+ is simply getting slaughtered by Ice Lake.
  • 0ldman79 - Tuesday, December 17, 2019 - link

    This is Ice Lake, not Skylake.

    Not a 5 year old design.

    This is, however, the two products that Microsoft has available to choose from.
  • Korguz - Tuesday, December 17, 2019 - link

    m53. i doubt skylake can beat zen2, clock for clock, or core for core....

    0ldman79 but is based on a 5 year old design, so basically the same thing, hence why is 10th generation, not 1st generation
  • MBarton - Monday, December 30, 2019 - link

    Wow, such a fanboy statement from a guy that whined about that fatality guy being a fanboy.
  • maroon1 - Tuesday, December 17, 2019 - link

    WRONG

    Ryzen 7 3780U came out this year.

    It is based on 12nm Zen+ but AMD low power mobile is almost 1 year behind their desktop parts

    Zen2 APU will be out in 2020, but intel will also have Tiger lake-U in 2020.
  • AnnoyedGrunt - Saturday, December 14, 2019 - link

    I thought the article was very fair, given what is available from AMD and Intel in the mobile space.

    While these benchmarks show convincingly in favor of Intel, I was wondering if the performance difference was noticeable in "normal" user. Seems like the battery life is likely to be the most significant difference between the two (that the user would notice).

    Have the authors been able to use these systems day to day to see what the responsiveness is like, whether you notice a difference loading office software, doing presentations, running excel, chrome, safari, etc?

    I have a Dell mobile workstation for work, and just started testing a desktop workstation, and while I'm sure the desktop is faster in tests like these, I honestly don't notice a performance difference at all, except in the heaviest CAD work. Therefore I am curious of a user could really notice a difference between these two systems in typical use.

    -AG
  • Samus - Saturday, December 14, 2019 - link

    Ouch, well that's embarrassing.

    Why the hell did Microsoft even bother with a Ryzen model when its so inferior?

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