The F.E.A.R. Issue

To the readers that pointed out our F.E.A.R. results as being unusually high, we owe you a sincere apology.  When we went back to test Conroe for the second time we re-ran all of our tests to make sure that no mistakes were made.  We caught the Quake 4 issue where Conroe’s SMP performance was understated, and we also discovered a problem in our F.E.A.R. testing. 

While our intention was to test both the AMD and Intel systems at the “Maximum” Computer settings and “High” Graphics settings, only the Conroe system was configured as such.  We inadvertently left the AMD system at a higher resolution (1280 x 960) instead of the default resolution (1024 x 768) when you select the “High” Graphics defaults.  The oversight was entirely our own doing as Intel was not running the benchmarks or configuring them, it simply happened while we were setting up both systems at the same time.  We played with different resolution settings and while deciding that we would go with one, managed to configure the two boxes differently. 

Of course this means that our initial F.E.A.R. tests were incorrect, and below we have the correct results with the settings we intended to run both systems on: 

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

The performance advantage of Conroe makes a lot more sense now, at 20% instead of 41%.  With performance in Quake 4, UT2004 and HL2 in the 20 - 30% faster range on Conroe, the F.E.A.R. results now make a lot more sense. 

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

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

To those who pointed out that even the CrossFire X1900 setup would be more GPU bound at 1280 x 960, you were very correct, our original results were inaccurate.  We do strive for accuracy and reliability in our results here at AnandTech, which is why we went back and retested/confirmed all of our initial findings before bringing you this update.  Aside from the F.E.A.R. and Quake 4 issues that we've since corrected, we found no other performance anomalies in our initial results. 

The Benchmark Issue The DDR2 Issue
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  • Larso - Thursday, March 9, 2006 - link

    This conroe thing is truly interesting news. At last Intel has dropped the netburst mishap and developed a useable cpu.
  • Furen - Thursday, March 9, 2006 - link

    Man, we didnt see so many people complaining about netburst when it was whoring the Athlon XP... I agree that it needed to be replaced but it wasn't all bad...
  • Darth Farter - Thursday, March 9, 2006 - link

    looks like this round is going to Intel as it did with the northwood.

    Let's see what the underdog will have in store for us.

    I myself suspect AMD having much more focused on the quad core server arena where it's likely going to whoop ass the way conroe is doing now in regards with FP performance
  • stelleg151 - Thursday, March 9, 2006 - link

    Great work, and Im glad you got that FEAR anomoly worked out. It is definately exciting seeing such a leap in performance.

    That being said, I personally would have put a little bit more emphasis on the fact that these processors are still scheduled to be 3-6 months away, as this is in the most extreme sense a PREview and not a REview.
  • IHYLN - Thursday, March 9, 2006 - link

    good job clearing the air Anand. And whoever was that person was who called me an idiot for saying the crossfire 1900xt setup was GPU limited, I snub my nose at thee.

    Great job on intel's part for actually making a desirable CPU and I hope AMD can match or exceed.
  • Calin - Monday, March 13, 2006 - link

    At least a lower price will benefit everyone. As long as processor performance is concerned, AMD won't gain the crown easily. Looks like Intel will be on top again.
    I say this is good, as prices for AMD processors were a bit static. I hope for a price war :D

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