Gaming

Three DX9-era games representing different gaming engines were used to test the performance of Kingston DDR3-1375 in real world gaming. There are more recent gaming titles available, but they are also DX9. We will update games in the memory test suite as soon as a selection of DX10 games with reliable benchmarks are available. At that time the memory test OS will also be moved to Vista.

The Far Cry - River demo was run for three loops and results in fps were averaged over the three runs.

Far Cry- HOC River - 2.66GHz
Frames Per Second - Higher is Better
Memory 800 1066 1333 1520 (380x7)
Kingston DDR3-1333
KHX11000D3LLK2
103.77
5-4-3-10 1.75V
106.11
6-5-5-12 1.7V
106.91
7-7-6-15 1.7V
107.46
8-8-8-22 1.8V
Corsair DDR3-1066
CM3X1024-1066C7
103.39
6-6-6-15 1.5V
105.87
7-7-7-20 1.5V
106.70
9-9-9-25 1.5V
-
DDR2 - P35
Corsair Dominator
106.30
3-3-3-9 2.25V
108.00
4-4-3-11 2.3V
- -
DDR2 - P965 (10x266)
Corsair Dominator
101.26
3-3-3-9 2.25V
103.04
4-4-3-11 2.3V
- -

Far Cry performs best with fast DDR2 memory on the P35 chipset, much as we expected. However, the performance of DDR3 on the P35 is much closer to DDR2 on the Asus P5K with the low latency Kingston DDR3. It is also important to note that both DDR3 and DDR2, even in slow DDR3 latencies, are faster than the fastest DDR2 on the P965.

DDR3-1333 reaches speeds almost the same as DDR2-1066 at 4-4-3 timings on the P35. Speeds above 1333 chart new performance territory for DDR3.

Quake 4 - id Demo - 2.66GHz
Frames Per Second - Higher is Better
Memory 800 1066 1333 1520 (380x7)
Kingston DDR3-1333
KHX11000D3LLK2
111.2
5-4-3-10 1.75V
114.7
6-5-5-12 1.7V
115.5
7-7-6-15 1.7V
116.0
8-8-8-20 1.8V
Corsair DDR3-1066
CM3X1024-1066C7
107.9
6-6-6-15 1.5V
111.8
7-7-7-20 1.5V
113.2
9-9-9-25 1.5V
-
DDR2 - P35
Corsair Dominator
112.5
3-3-3-9 2.25V
115.7
4-4-3-11 2.3V
- -
DDR2 - P965 (10x266)
Corsair Dominator
106.00
3-3-3-9 2.25V
109.7
4-4-3-11 2.3V
- -

Quake 4 and the underlying engine have always proved to be very sensitive to improvements in memory bandwidth. This is amply demonstrated in these memory tests. Again in all cases DDR2 and DDR3 are faster on P35 than the fastest DDR2 on P965. The pattern is the same as in Far Cry but the differences are magnified in Q4. One interesting result is that the low-latency Kingston is now within 1 frame of DDR2 3-3-3 on P35 at both the overlap speeds of 800 and 1066. Kingston DDR3-1333 performance is at about the same speed at DDR2 4-4-3 at 1066 on the same P35 chipset. Speeds higher than 1333 again chart new performance territory.

Half Life 2 - Lost Coast - 2.66GHz
Frames Per Second - Higher is Better
Memory 800 1066 1333 1520 (380x7)
Kingston DDR3-1333
KHX11000D3LLK2
108.0
5-4-3-10 1.75V
109.1
6-5-5-12 1.7V
109.5
7-7-6-15 1.7V
109.5
8-8-8-22 1.8V
Corsair DDR3-1066
CM3X1024-1066C7
107.0
6-6-6-15 1.5V
108.4
7-7-7-20 1.5V
108.7
9-9-9-25 1.5V
-
DDR2 - P35
Corsair Dominator
108.5
3-3-3-9 2.25V
109.5
4-4-3-11 2.3V
- -
DDR2 - P965 (10x266)
Corsair Dominator
103.9
3-3-3-9 2.25V
104.9
4-4-3-11 2.3V
- -

We include Half-Life 2: Lost Coast as a representative of games that are less sensitive to improvements in memory bandwidth. Lost Coast is played through the Steam engine, where there is the constant worry, for a reviewer, that each new update of Steam will break your test benchmarks. Though the differences are not as dramatic, the pattern is exactly the same as the other two games. All P35 results are faster than the same fast DDR2 results on the P965. DDR2-800 3-3-3 and DDR2-1066 4-4-3 are the fastest in the overlap speeds on the P35 motherboard.

Low latency Kingston DDR3 is all but identical in results to fast DDR2 at both overlap speeds, showing the impact of lowered latency on DDR3 performance. 1333 and above results chart new performance territory, and the Low latency Kingston performance in these higher speeds certainly validates DDR3 as the performance memory for the future.

Number Crunching and Overclocking Conclusion
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  • goinginstyle - Thursday, May 24, 2007 - link

    How did you arrive at the 1520 DDR3 memory speed? FSB increase from 8x333 or a memory ratio change. Do you have any overclocked DDR2 memory scores on the P965? It would be interesting to compare overclocked DDR2 to DDR3.
  • Wesley Fink - Thursday, May 24, 2007 - link

    You can look back at the Corsair Dominator memory review where we ran benchmarks at the highest overclock we could achieve. THe review is at http://www.anandtech.com/memory/showdoc.aspx?i=291...">http://www.anandtech.com/memory/showdoc.aspx?i=291.... THere are also overclocked test scores that can be compared in any of our more recent DDR2 reviews
  • Wesley Fink - Thursday, May 24, 2007 - link

    From the 1333 memory setting we overclocked to 380x8, or 3.04GHz. At that OC, with a base 1333 memory setting, the memory speed is 1520.

    One reader pointed out that 7x380 is also 2.66, which is our test frequency at other speeds. That is correct and it is an intriguing idea to also run all benchmarks at the 380x7 speed. We'll consider for a comparison in an upcoming review.
  • goinginstyle - Thursday, May 24, 2007 - link

    quote:

    From the 1333 memory setting we overclocked to 380x8, or 3.04GHz. At that OC, with a base 1333 memory setting, the memory speed is 1520.


    So it is very possible that the improvements in scores came from the increase in cpu speed and not the memory or it is a combination of both? How close can you get to 1333 memory speed at 8x380 so we know how much improvement there is in cpu speed over the increase in memory speed.

    quote:

    One reader pointed out that 7x380 is also 2.66, which is our test frequency at other speeds. That is correct and it is an intriguing idea to also run all benchmarks at the 380x7 speed. We'll consider for a comparison in an upcoming review.


    That is what has been confusing to me. Why not run at 7x380 to keep the CPU at the same speed so we can see how much performance is gained in running the memory higher. The one flaw is the increase in FSB speed would alter the scores if the app responds to cpu throughput improvements. I would suppose that would be minimal in the game testing but it would throw off the sandra scores. Does high memory speeds at high latencies beat stock memory speeds at low latencies?

    The article yesterday mentioned 1t command rates. Did you try 1t to see what happened with the Kingston memory? You used to report Everest scores and I was wondering if those scores are available or maybe Memtest if you use it. I think it would be interesting to see latency numbers in the article.
  • Wesley Fink - Thursday, May 24, 2007 - link

    Our standard procedure has been to test to the highest available memory setting, in this case 1333, and then overclock as far as we can go using this base memory setting. It is just a fortunate accident that 1520 was top OC here (and it still wasn;t the fastest results - 1500 7-7-7 was faster)which is also 7x333 or the same 2.66 used in the other memory speed tests. It would not likely hit that exact number again in future DDR3 reviews.
  • yuchai - Thursday, May 24, 2007 - link

    the 1520 speed is probably achieved by a 380 x 7 = 2660 configuration, so processor speed remains constant while the RAM runs at 1520 speeds.

    That said I'm surprised at the big improvement from 1333 to 1520, especially compared to the relatively small difference between 1333 and 1066.
  • goinginstyle - Thursday, May 24, 2007 - link

    quote:

    the 1520 speed is probably achieved by a 380 x 7 = 2660 configuration, so processor speed remains constant while the RAM runs at 1520 speeds.


    If that is the case then how do we know how much the FSB increased the score or how much the memory affected the results. I still think it is important to show overclocked DDR2 if they are going to show overclocked DDR3.
  • Chunga29 - Thursday, May 24, 2007 - link

    I wish that you were correct, but looking at the tables at least on says "8x380" - page 4. So it's not apples to apples. The text never talks about how fast the 1520 RAM speed is, likely because that's partly due to a 14% CPU overclock.

    While we're at it, where are the numbers for P965 with 1333 FSB? We've seen overclocking results on P965 with bus speeds as high as 2000+, so don't give us any excuses about it not being possible. Using ratios, you can come somewhat close to DDR2-800 and DDR2-1066, and if you're throwing in overclocked DDR3 scores anyway.... At least let us see what DDR2 can achieve on P965 with a decent effort. Sure, it's out of official spec, but then DDR2-800 with 3-3-3 timings isn't JEDEC spec either.
  • Wesley Fink - Friday, May 25, 2007 - link

    The 7x380 and 8x380 results are in a comment below and will be added to the OC section in a table.

    As for the P965, it was not designed to run 1333 processors or DDR3 memory, so there is no 1333 CPU raio available or any memory ratio above 1066. While it is true you can run a 25% overclock at 1333 FSB, the memory is also overclocked 25% from whatever ratio you selected. Even if you OC and select to get close to 1333 you will be running different memory straps on the P35 and P65 which definitely impacts results. It is very difficult to fairly compare P965 to P35 at speeds above 1066.

    At 1333 FSB the DDR2 memory is OC'ed from the 1066 base to 1333, and we don't have a single stick of DDR2 that is stable at 1333. An 800 speed base on P965 at 1333 would be DDR2-1000, which should be compared to what on the P35? Try to select OC vlues on your P965 board to see what we are talking about here.

    You are correct that it is is not impossible to come up with something somewhat close in a P965 test, it is just everything on the P965 would be overclocked while P35 would be running in spec. We can always compare an overclcoked P965 to a spec part, but is that more like justification for a P965 purchase than a revealing comparison.

    We will likely run some more P965 tests just to answer questions here, but we will only be including overlap speeds, where comparisons can be fairly made, in future reviews. There are also a multitude of P965 OC results in reviews out there for those that are interested.
  • Zaitsev - Thursday, May 24, 2007 - link

    I noticed this as well. It just seems odd because the jump from 1066->1333 is 267MHz, while 1333->1520 is 187MHz. In Far Cry and Quake 4 that translated into 10.91 and 8 more frames per sec. respectively. Did I miss something in the article or can someone explain why a smaller increase in MHz yielded a larger improvement?

    Oh, I see now that the processor is overclocked.

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