Gaming Tests: Far Cry 5

The fifth title in Ubisoft's Far Cry series lands us right into the unwelcoming arms of an armed militant cult in Montana, one of the many middles-of-nowhere in the United States. With a charismatic and enigmatic adversary, gorgeous landscapes of the northwestern American flavor, and lots of violence, it is classic Far Cry fare. Graphically intensive in an open-world environment, the game mixes in action and exploration with a lot of configurability.

Unfortunately, the game doesn’t like us changing the resolution in the results file when using certain monitors, resorting to 1080p but keeping the quality settings. But resolution scaling does work, so we decided to fix the resolution at 1080p and use a variety of different scaling factors to give the following:

  • 720p Low, 1440p Low, 4K Low, 1440p Max.

Far Cry 5 outputs a results file here, but that the file is a HTML file, which showcases a graph of the FPS detected. At no point in the HTML file does it contain the frame times for each frame, but it does show the frames per second, as a value once per second in the graph. The graph in HTML form is a series of (x,y) co-ordinates scaled to the min/max of the graph, rather than the raw (second, FPS) data, and so using regex I carefully tease out the values of the graph, convert them into a (second, FPS) format, and take our values of averages and percentiles that way.

If anyone from Ubisoft wants to chat about building a benchmark platform that would not only help me but also every other member of the tech press build our benchmark testing platform to help our readers decide what is the best hardware to use on your games, please reach out to ian@anandtech.com. Some of the suggestions I want to give you will take less than half a day and it’s easily free advertising to use the benchmark over the next couple of years (or more).

As with the other gaming tests, we run each resolution/setting combination for a minimum of 10 minutes and take the relevant frame data for averages and percentiles.

AnandTech Low Resolution
Low Quality
Medium Resolution
Low Quality
High Resolution
Low Quality
Medium Resolution
Max Quality
Average FPS
95th Percentile

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

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  • Netmsm - Sunday, March 7, 2021 - link

    Hi Ian;
    I appreciate your work and also I have a suggestion hoping to be considered.
    I think it's better not to mention processors by their formal or nominal power in benches. for us, it can be much more justifiable when we know how much a processor consumes power in each test separately.
    I know there's a separate test for power consumption but, as you know, in such an old-fashioned yet common way, the efficacy of each processor for each test is not clear. and I'm afraid, it undermines your work's articulacy.
    regards =)
  • Polacott - Sunday, March 7, 2021 - link

    Charlie Demerjian was right long time ago, when he stated this was going to be a fiasco.
    Seems like a desperate move from intel, more than lift off, this rocket is hitting the ground.
  • eastcoast_pete - Sunday, March 7, 2021 - link

    Thanks Ian! I actually applaud the decision to go ahead and put a legally purchased CPU through the paces before the official embargo date for the official, free-for-testing samples; you were very up front how and where you got your test candidate. And, once an authorized reseller sells them, they're "public" and fair game.
    These performance tests are also a unique opportunity to see by just how much the official sample Rocket Lake with the then-valid BIOS firmware might differ from this store-bought one.
    Actually, if Intel would want to be smart about this, they'd send you a coupon to order a RL and MoBo from any authorized retailer, to avoid accusations of a "review edition" hand-selected to be the best binning possible.

    Lastly, I wish you (AT) and other review sites would occasionally cross-check the results of their review samples (sent by the manufacturer) to the same unit bought through retail. I know that's not always feasible (costs $$$) , but doing so every once in while might help keep the manufacturers honest and assure us, their customers.
  • pman6 - Sunday, March 7, 2021 - link

    hey, it comes with a free space heater.
    nice
  • pman6 - Sunday, March 7, 2021 - link

    why wasn't there a comparison of the XE integrated graphics?
  • Ryan Smith - Sunday, March 7, 2021 - link

    Partially for timeliness reasons. Partially because we've already seen Xe in Tiger Lake. Rocket Lake's Xe-LP implementation is much slower than the mobile chips, since it has only one-third the number of EUs. So while we'll collect that data eventually, it's nothing terribly exciting.
  • terroradagio - Sunday, March 7, 2021 - link

    Intel Rocket Lake Core i7-11700K vs Core i9-10900K CPU Gaming Benchmarks Leaked – Reportedly Faster Than Comet Lake With New BIOS

    https://wccftech.com/intel-rocket-lake-core-i7-117...
  • eastcoast_pete - Sunday, March 7, 2021 - link

    The boost clock frequency in that WCCF article for the 11700K is especially interesting; according to the table in it, the boost clock goes up to 470 GHz (: Now, that's a clock speed worth writing about!
  • Hifihedgehog - Monday, March 8, 2021 - link

    WCCFTech has been Intel’s lap dog ever since Zen 2 hit the scene with article after article with a spin in Intel’s favor and I would not be the least bit surprised if they are just like UserBenchmark. Their notorious Usman Pirzada in particular harped on Ian for showing peak power for Rocket Lake, claiming it was disingenuous and misleading since AVX-512 is the reason and that puts the processors on unequal footing. Well, Mr. Pirzada, you forget. AVX-512 also gives a performance uplift so you better also ask to note all the benchmarks where it is engaged so we are playing fair here. If you truly want to level the playing field and throw out AVX-512, you have to throw out a key item that has contributed to an uplift in performance and turn it off in both benchmarks and power tests alike. Either both ways or no ways, sonny Jim.
  • Spunjji - Monday, March 8, 2021 - link

    "So coming to the benchmarks, only three titles were tested which include Crysis Remastered, Star Wars: Jedi Fallen Order, and Cyberpunk 2077. The test settings and resolution are not mentioned."

    It's bad enough that they only showed tests from games that Anandtech don't have in their test suite - so we can't compare directly - but it's even worse that we have no data about the settings used, so nobody else could possibly compare directly, either.

    Honestly, at this point I consider myself to have a good indicator of final performance, and will draw final conclusions when the embargo lifts.

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