Wolfenstein

Finally among our benchmark suite we have Wolfenstein, the most recent game to be released using the id Software Tech 4 engine. All things considered it’s not a very graphically intensive game, but at this point it’s the most recent OpenGL title available. It’s more than likely the entire OpenGL landscape will be thrown upside-down once id releases Rage later this year.

Wolfenstein is quite easy to make CPU limited even at higher resolutions, so the range on our charts is compressed some here. Even against the risk of being CPU limited, the 6950 1GB has a solid lead over the GTX 560 here at both 1920 and 1680, showcasing either an NVIDIA weakness at Wolfenstein, or possibly a larger weakness at OpenGL as a whole. Among the NVIDIA cards the GTX 560’s lead over the GTX 460 1GB is the lowest we’ve ever seen it: 20% at 1920, and all of 2% at a 1680. NVIDIA is definitely CPU limited here, if not also memory bandwidth limited.

Mass Effect 2 Compute & Tessellation
Comments Locked

87 Comments

View All Comments

  • surt - Tuesday, January 25, 2011 - link

    It doesn't work like that. Computer games generally have no more than 3 frames rendered at a time. The remainder is pre-render textures, models, etc ... everything that might be needed to render a frame. They need to have everything handy that might be needed to make a picture of your view-point. Any enemy that might step into view. The mountains behind you in case you turn around, etc. If it isn't already stored on the card, they have to go get it from disk, which is comparatively extremely slow (thousands of times slower than anything that is already in memory).
  • ATOmega - Tuesday, January 25, 2011 - link

    Okay, so it's released today. Where are they? I can't find one at local stores and they don't even know when they're getting them in.
  • MrJim - Tuesday, January 25, 2011 - link

    Full bitstreaming audio capabilities? Thinking about this card and Adobe Premiere CUDA-hack :)
  • heflys - Tuesday, January 25, 2011 - link

    The 560 is only faster when you feature games that show a bias towards Nvidia products. Heck, in some of those tests, it was beating a 6970!
  • Lolimaster - Tuesday, January 25, 2011 - link

    And know you can adjust that absurd tessellation levels(that no one notices) with 11.1a hotfix.

    560 is unimpressive, without much effort 6870 1GB / 6950 1GB are taking the bang for buck crown. Specially 6870 at near $200.

    If you want futureproof don't look back, 6950 2GB all the way.
  • cknobman - Tuesday, January 25, 2011 - link

    thats exactly what I was thinking.
  • heflys - Tuesday, January 25, 2011 - link

    I just don't see how a game like HAWX, with its history, can be a indicator of the 560 being faster.
  • Sufo - Wednesday, January 26, 2011 - link

    Yeah, i have to agree here. In the the two games generally considered the most taxing of modern systems (crysis and metro) the 6950 comes out on top (by like 15% at that) - i think it's a mistake to say:

    "The GTX 560 Ti ultimately has the edge: it’s a bit faster and it’s quieter than the 6950, and if that’s all you care about then there’s the answer you seek."

    I haven't totted it up but even if the 560 over all benches has a few frames over the 6950 (tho tbh, it doesn't even look that way :/) the fact that it loses in games like this means people buying it on that recommendation, thinking it's the faster card, will be disappointed.
  • murray13 - Tuesday, January 25, 2011 - link

    I just don't get your conclusion. You say that the 560 is faster than the 6950 1g but looking at the graphs it's a draw. It's faster is some games the AMD is faster in others.

    I originally just looked at the games I play and when I did that the 6950 won all of them. It's a good thing I went back and looked at all of them before I posted. I was ready to really give it to ya. But as it is I just think these two cards are about as evenly matched both in performance and price as I've seen from the two camps in a long time.

    Running a 8800GTX I'm about due for a gfx card upgrade. With what is out right now the 6970 is about the best bang for my buck.

    Ever since Anand stopped doing the vid card reviews (yeah it's been a while) I haven't exactly agreed with the conclusions being given. Everyone's entitled to theirs I guess.
  • vol7ron - Tuesday, January 25, 2011 - link

    I'm still on the E6600 C2D with a 9800GTX - the next upgrade is going to be crucial. It all hinges on that Z68 chipset.

    We've been looking at i7-2G for our workstations as well. I don't think we're considering the Z68 for that, since it's not necessary and the P67 is a good capable board.

    All-in-all; personal upgrade is still on schedule (sometime around 2011Q2-2012Q2), hinging on Z68 and SSD releases.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now