F.E.A.R. Performance

F.E.A.R. gets its own page for a couple of reasons:

1) It's the only gaming benchmark that we're using that doesn't use an Intel provided demo. This is the same demo we use in our tests.

2) The integrated test tool reports Min, Avg and Max results, and three graphs take up more room than one.

We ran with all of the effects settings at Maximum and the graphics settings at Highest defaults. Updated: As we've described in our follow-up article, there was an issue with the original F.E.A.R. results that has since been fixed. The charts below have been updated.

First up - the average frame rate:

F.E.A.R. - Average Frame Rate

If you had any doubts about the results on the previous page, this one should convince you. Even when running a non-Intel created demo, Conroe offers a 20% performance advantage over the 2.8GHz Athlon 64 X2.

The advantage exists in both the minimum and maximum frame rates as well:

F.E.A.R. - Minimum Frame Rate

F.E.A.R. - Maxmimum Frame Rate

Gaming Performance Media Encoding Performance
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  • ninjit - Tuesday, March 7, 2006 - link

    Explain how 1280x1024 is GPU limited on an ATI X1900 Cross-fire system (i.e. 2 cards)???

    Idiota!
  • radzio - Tuesday, March 7, 2006 - link

    Media encoding tests (e.g. DivX) were not GPU-limited. Result ?
    Conroe 2.66MHZ is 30% faster than overclocked Athlon Fx60 (2.8MHz).....
  • JustAnAverageGuy - Tuesday, March 7, 2006 - link

    532 Average FPS in F.E.A.R.?

    I'd sell my opteron right now if that were the case.

    /typo notifier
  • Justin Case - Tuesday, March 7, 2006 - link

    Unless your monitor happens to support a refresh rate of 532 Hz, it would be kind of useless. Not to mention that your eyes can't really tell the difference for anything above 120 fps or so (that's one of the reasons why no monitor bothers with refresh rates higher than that).
  • sp1nfer - Wednesday, March 8, 2006 - link

    Please cut the 'our eyes can't see more than <insert pointless number here>' bs. You have no concrete fact to prove it. Let me give you some: some games play smooth at 30fps but as they drop below 25, gameplay gets hindered.

    And please provide a link to the Hz:FPS ratio/link.

    Having 500fps in a game with a processor and 300 with another clearly shows there is more room ahead for the 500fps processor even if you can't enjoy all of them.
  • Fenixgoon - Tuesday, March 7, 2006 - link

    See wht happens when Intel actually has to produce a good CPU?

    I'm no Intel fanboy, I go for what fits my budget. Of course, I can afford neither an A64 or a Conroe, but hopefully this will drive other CPU prices down on both sides.
  • flyck - Tuesday, March 7, 2006 - link

    p4 was also a good cpu. only not the best.

    looking @ those benchmarks i would have to say i'm pretty amazed by it. AMd might get 10% closer with AM2.... but i think they'll have a problem with there K8 like it is now. Well i think we are back in the days of northwood(800) vs XP. maybe a bit worse for amd, but we have to wait for 6 months to say that.
  • SLIM - Tuesday, March 7, 2006 - link

    WOW, Awesome performance. Can't wait to see the real reviews against the then current competition.

    PS: Please fix the average framerate graph for FEAR, last I checked average framerate was not usually 3x the maximum (or reverse the titles of the graphs or something).
  • goz314 - Tuesday, March 7, 2006 - link

    I'm sure the AMD cult and Intel naysayers will try to find something wrong with this initial impression of Conroe's performance, but for the time being it's nice to see the 800 pound gorilla "wake up" again.
  • BrownTown - Tuesday, March 7, 2006 - link

    I'm an Intel fan and I see stuff wrong with these benchmarks. Its just a litle bit of a stretch to see that much improvement on benchmarks set up by Intel and not suspect something fishy is going on.

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