World in Conflict - Soviet Assault

We utilize the built-in benchmark for World in Conflict. We set the advanced options to Very High and manually set AA to 2x and AF to 16x. We take the median score from five benchmark runs.


World in Conflict - Soviet Assault

The single card results at x8 is trailing the x16 setups by 3% at stock and 5% when overclocked. Minimum frame rates for the single card results are around 4% better on the X58 platform at stock and trails the P55 by 3% when overclocked .

World in Conflict CrossFire Scaling – Average Frame Rates


ATI HD 5870 CF Scaling World in Conflict World in Conflict 4.2GHz
Intel Core i7 920 (X58) 58.9% 77.6%
Intel Core i7 860 (P55) 45.5% 70.7%

At stock speeds, the X58 has a 13% scaling advantage over the P55 and almost 7% when overclocked.

World in Conflict CrossFire Scaling – Minimum Frame Rates


ATI HD 5870 CF Scaling World in Conflict World in Conflict 4.2GHz
Intel Core i7 920 (X58) 4.2% 27.3%
Intel Core i7 860 (P55) 8.7% 5.9%

Minimum frame rates favor the P55 in our stock clock speed results right over 4% but trail the X58 around 21% when overclocked.

Battle Forge - Renegade

Our first DX11 benchmark comes courtesy of Battle Forge. We set all options to Very High and enable DX11. We take the median score of five benchmark runs utilizing the in-game benchmark.

Battle Forge - Renegade

The single card results at x8 trails the x16 results by about 2% at stock and when overclocked. Minimum frame rates for the single card results are around 50% better on the P55 platform at stock and both platforms are even when overclocked.

Battle Forge CrossFire Scaling – Average Frame Rates


ATI HD 5870 CF Scaling Battle Forge Battle Forge 4.2GHz
Intel Core i7 920 (X58) 84.4% 84.4%
Intel Core i7 860 (P55) 84.5% 83.1%

At stock and overclocked speeds, both platforms are practically tied when it comes to scaling in average frame rates.

Battle Forge CrossFire Scaling – Minimum Frame Rates


ATI HD 5870 CF Scaling Battle Forge Battle Forge 4.2GHz
Intel Core i7 920 (X58) 225% 184.6%
Intel Core i7 860 (P55) 133.3% 176.9%

Minimum frame rates favor the X58 in our stock and overclocked speed results. This title thrives on CrossFire for improving minimum frame rates. Although the percentages are large, the minimum frame rates are still in the 36 fps range, more than enough for an enjoyable game experience.

Resident Evil meets Tales of Valor Batman plus Power Consumption
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  • GeorgeH - Tuesday, September 29, 2009 - link

    Wow, you're totally right:

    Lynnfield: 12-28 min FPS
    X58: 8-26 min FPS

    Talk about a crippled platform!

    We all already know that you're a moron, but in the future please try to make it less obvious. Thanks.
  • philosofool - Tuesday, September 29, 2009 - link

    The result of this test is really clear to me: if you are even remotely close to on a budget, P55 w/ a great card is the way to go. The $100 you save on a P55 mobo invested into graphics will get you way more than the same invested in X58 and a $100 cheaper graphics card. If money is no object, get X58. Perhaps more importantly, once we're dealing with cards and games that drop things well below the 60Hz refresh rate of our monitor, the additional bandwidth in X58 will probably make an even smaller difference.

    The fears regarding the integrated PCIe controller on Lynnfield are wildly exaggerated.
  • strikeback03 - Wednesday, September 30, 2009 - link

    I'd say a $100 difference in motherboards is largely an exaggeration depending on exactly what features you are looking for, the power consumption differences are far more interesting to me.

    Now if we could only find out whether 8x PCIe would be a bottleneck for a SATA3 card.
  • UNHchabo - Wednesday, September 30, 2009 - link

    In terms of theoretical bandwidth, there's plenty in a PCIe slot. The SATA 6Gbps standard gives about 600MB/s of effective bandwidth, and PCIe 2.0 has 500MB/s per lane. This means that with PCIe 2.0, your motherboard slot is only limiting your card's performance if you give one lane per port.
  • yacoub - Tuesday, September 29, 2009 - link

    Sure, and the power consumption savings are a nice plus. Then consider that 90+% of us don't even care about CF/SLI because we only ever one run GPU card, and there's really no reason to bother with X58 over P55.
  • ekoostik - Tuesday, September 29, 2009 - link

    Agreed. Really enjoyed reading this on my new single-GPU powered 860 sitting silently next to me.
  • yacoub - Tuesday, September 29, 2009 - link

    "Does that mean the integrated dual x8 PCIe 2.0 logic on Lynnfield is a poor choice compared to the dual x16 PCIe 2.0 sporting X58, absolutely not based on our initial tests."

    The comma after "X58" should be a question mark and "absolutely" should be the beginning of a new sentence. ;)
  • the zorro - Tuesday, September 29, 2009 - link

    almost 10% penalty because of the lynnfield crippled northbridge.
    its not just that but in the more interesting part of the game when there is more congestion, lynnfield stutters.
    if you are going to buy a new spanking 3.72 tflops directx ati card don't commit the mistake of using lynnfield.
  • Griswold - Monday, October 5, 2009 - link

    You're an idiot regardless of what you buy - so it evens out.
  • DominionSeraph - Wednesday, September 30, 2009 - link

    "x58 is 1fps faster than lynnfield!!" as he sits behind his 33ms input lag, 3 frame ghosting, 60Hz LCD using a 600dpi mouse on a free mousepad.

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