Doom 3 Performance

Doom 3 performance has been led by NVIDIA ever since the game came out, but last week ATI released a driver which incorporated quite a few performance enhancements for OGL based games. The playing field has certainly changed quite a bit over the weekend, but is it enough to topple the new NVIDIA part?

Without 4xAA enabled, NVIDIA parts still clearly lead ATI hardware. The 7800 GTX 512 performs very well, scoring better at 2048x1536 than the X1800 XT does at 1600x1200.

Doom 3 Performance
When 4xAA is enabled, we see ATI hardware get a huge boost. The benefit from ATI's latest driver is actually enough for the X1800 XT to topple the original 7800 GTX in performance under Doom 3. Of course, for the price difference one would hope the X1800 XT would lead the 7800 GTX in all cases. The clear winner here is still the 7800 GTX 512.

Doom 3 Performance 4xAA


Day of Defeat: Source Performance F.E.A.R. Performance
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  • ViRGE - Monday, November 14, 2005 - link

    AFAIK 4xAA is the last level of AA that's constant between ATI and NV. The X850 tops out at 6xAA(which NV doesn't have), then there's 8xS, and the list goes on...
  • Griswold - Monday, November 14, 2005 - link

    Thats a beast no less. The only thing ATI can do now is kick off that mysterious R580 and it better have a few more pipes than the 520 at the same or even higher clock speeds - and no paperlaunch this time. Or just give up and get the launch right for the next generation...

    Is there any particular reason for only showing nvidia SLI results and no crossfire numbers at all?
  • Ryan Smith - Monday, November 14, 2005 - link

    This is something we discussed when working on this article, and there's really no purpose in testing a Crossfire setup at this point. The X1800 Crossfire master cards are not available yet to test an X1800 setup, and as we noted in our X850 Crossfire review, an X850 setup isn't really viable(not to mention it tops out at 1600x1200 when we test 2 higher resolutions).
  • Griswold - Monday, November 14, 2005 - link

    Ah well, woulda thought AT has a few master cards in their closet. Guess not. :)
  • Kyanzes - Monday, November 14, 2005 - link

    ONE WORD: DOMINATION
  • yacoub - Monday, November 14, 2005 - link

    Very interesting to see that 512MB has little to no impact on the performance - it is instead almost entirely the clock speed of the GPU and the RAM that makes the difference.

    Also, I think this is the first time in PC gaming history where I've seen testing done where video cards more than ~9 months old are all essentially 'obsolete' as far as performance. Even the 7800 GT which only even came out maybe six months ago is already near the bottom of the stack at these 1600x1200 tests, and considering that's what anyone with a 19" or greater LCD wants to ideally play at, that's a bit scary. Then you realize that the 7800GT is around $330 for that bottom-end performance and it just goes up from there. It's really $450-550 for solid performance at that resolution these days. That's disappointing.
  • ElFenix - Monday, November 14, 2005 - link

    no one with a 19" desktop LCD is playing a game at any higher than 1280x1024, in which case this card is basically a waste of money. i have a 20" widescreen lcd and i find myself playing in 1280x1024 a lot because the games often don't expand the field of view, rather they just narrow the screen vertically.
  • tfranzese - Monday, November 14, 2005 - link

    SLi/XFire scews the graphes. You need to take that into account when looking at the results.
  • Cygni - Monday, November 14, 2005 - link

    We have seen this in every successive generation of video cards. Unless your running AA at high res (ie over 1280x1024), RAM size has little impact on performance. Heck, 64mb is probably enough for the textures in most games.
  • cw42 - Monday, November 14, 2005 - link

    You really should have included COD2 in the tests. I remember seeing a test on another site that showed COD2 benefited GREATLY from 512mb vs 256mb of ram.

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