Grand Theft Auto V

Now a truly venerable title, GTA V is a veteran of past game suites that is still graphically demanding as they come. As an older DX11 title, it provides a glimpse into the graphically intensive games of yesteryear that don't incorporate the latest features. Originally released for consoles in 2013, the PC port came with a slew of graphical enhancements and options. Just as importantly, GTA V includes a rather intensive and informative built-in benchmark, somewhat uncommon in open-world games.

The settings are identical to its previous appearances, which are custom as GTA V does not have presets. To recap, a "Very High" quality is used, where all primary graphics settings turned up to their highest setting, except grass, which is at its own very high setting. Meanwhile 4x MSAA is enabled for direct views and reflections. This setting also involves turning on some of the advanced rendering features - the game's long shadows, high resolution shadows, and high definition flight streaming - but not increasing the view distance any further.

Grand Theft Auto V - 1920x1080 - Very High Quality

Grand Theft Auto V - 2560x1440 - Very High Quality

Grand Theft Auto V - 99th PCTL - 1920x1080 - Very High Quality

Grand Theft Auto V - 99th PCTL - 2560x1440 - Very High Quality

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  • Targon - Tuesday, January 21, 2020 - link

    Performance per dollar within a given price category makes sense, but in many situations, lower end cards will end up being better when it comes to performance per dollar. Beyond $400, your performance per dollar does drop, but you can't argue when people want a $600+ card because they want to game at 4k resolutions and the $400 cards just can't handle that resolution.
  • thecoolnamesweretaken - Tuesday, January 21, 2020 - link

    While I agree with you I wish more benchmarks included the 1070 Ti rather than the 1070. I imagine as an owner of such a card I must be in the extreme minority or perhaps reviewers never bothered to acquire one since it was released so late in the cycle before the move to the RTX 20xx architecture.
  • Retycint - Tuesday, January 21, 2020 - link

    Seconded. The 1070Ti was a relatively popular mining card (at least in my country) and hence the local used market is flooded with used 1070Ti's for about $170-180, which is an absolute steal for the performance and basically renders the entire mid range market obsolete
  • Krayzieka - Tuesday, January 21, 2020 - link

    Is this With the new driver boost?
  • Ryan Smith - Tuesday, January 21, 2020 - link

    This is with the lastest drivers. AMD's Radeon Boost (dynamic resolution) feature is not enabled.
  • maroon1 - Tuesday, January 21, 2020 - link

    AMD's Radeon Boost features is horrible specially if you running below 4K

    Watch some review like a hardware unboxed about it. They even recommend not using it for 1080p because you sacrifice a lot of image quality
  • Duckferd - Tuesday, January 21, 2020 - link

    All contextual. If you are running at 1080p on certain games with an APU, for example, it's still worthwhile with a minimal amount of boost (83%) because it keeps frametimes consistent when you're already constrained and most need it (i.e. panning in FPS games).

    How 'horrible' it is also depends on whether you can perceive the dynamic resolution changes as well. This is going to vary quite a bit depending on user configuration and tolerance, but I think the feature is worthwhile to include.
  • Cooe - Tuesday, January 21, 2020 - link

    Did you even watch that Hardware Unboxed video? They were very extremely impressed with the performance/visuals at 4K (and using a resolution downscaler of ANY KIND on lesser resolutions is an inherently horrible idea, not anything wrong with AMD's approach), though of course, the algorithm still has it's issues and was more like a proof of concept than anything you'd want to daily drive yet. But your original comment is absolutely NOT the point they ended at, so please don't spreading nonsense.
  • Spunjji - Wednesday, January 22, 2020 - link

    It's possible that spreading nonsense is maroon1's actual job :/
  • Irata - Tuesday, January 21, 2020 - link

    Well, Techspot really liked it and found it a lot better thsn DLSS in their review.

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