BattleForge

Up next is BattleForge, Electronic Arts’ free to play online RTS. As far as RTSes go this game can be quite demanding, and this is without the game’s DX11 features.

With BattleForge we see the 6990 fall in to a similar hole as the rest of the 6900 series when it comes to performance relative to NVIDIA’s 500 series: sometimes they do well, and sometimes NVIDIA has an advantage in the game; this is the latter.

In the meantime this is one of our better examples of why memory bandwidth matters, as not only does the 6990OC gain little on the 6990, but even the 6990OC trails the 6970CF by 8%. Clearly performance relative to the 6970CF is going to depend on how limited a game is by memory bandwidth. In the worst case, we’re looking at 6950CF-like memory bandwidth, and as a result 6950CF-like performance. The 6990’s advantage over the 5970 also shrinks here as a result, dropping to 17%.

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  • Figaro56 - Tuesday, March 8, 2011 - link

    I have 2 XFX HD 5870 cards for sale. I have a double lifetime warranty on these so you get the use of the second lifetime warranty on these. Interested? They are very great performers I can vouch for that. I am use to upgrading my GPU on an annual basis so I am upgrading to 2 HD 6970. $230 each.
  • Thanny - Tuesday, March 8, 2011 - link

    Ignoring the inappropriateness of advertising here, I submit:

    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N8...

    Why would someone pay you $230 for a used product that can be obtained new at $190?
  • fausto412 - Tuesday, March 8, 2011 - link

    I kinda wanted to see a chart with the most common gaming resolution...and can we benchmark with a Q9550 just for comparison? i would love to know if i'm holding back a video card by not going i5 or i7 and by how much.
  • jabber - Tuesday, March 8, 2011 - link

    If you can afford a 6990 why would you be bothering using it with a Q9550 at 1680x1050. Hence why it isnt part of this review.

    This review is to show how it works for the intended market/customer.

    As I said before, this card isnt for folks like you (or me for that matter). Sorry.
  • 7Enigma - Tuesday, March 8, 2011 - link

    The most common gaming resolution for this card is the one Ryan tested. It is pointless to test at a lower resolution other than possibly true 24" (1920X1200). And even at that res this card is really not needed.
  • Figaro56 - Tuesday, March 8, 2011 - link

    BOYA to both of those resolutions. You should be playing your games at 2560x1600. Now that's what I'm talkin about! You'd be saying hell ya.
  • Jorgisven - Tuesday, March 8, 2011 - link

    It seems we're getting into the Pentium IV trap, a bit. Big, hot, power-hungry, noisy chips...personally, I'm going to pass on this generation of GPUs. I'm waiting for a revolution in either manufacturing or coding. It's all well and good to have a fast computer for getting what you need done in minimal, but at the risk of the box taking flight because the fans are now of jet engine proportion in speed and power, I'd rather not be able to hear my fans over my headphones...or risk my cat getting sucked into the intake.
  • jabber - Tuesday, March 8, 2011 - link

    Well we've kinda got what we asked for. We've all gamely been buying more and more powerful graphics cards with regards to brute force rendering power.

    We've shown we love buying 750w+ power supplies with multiple GPU connectors, buying SLI and Xfire setups galore.

    So the GPU corps think we love nothing more than just piling on more and more power and wattage to solve the situation.

    It works both ways.

    What we should have been doing was challenging AMD and Nvidia to develop smarter rendering techniques. Had either of them developed PowerVR to the state we are in today we would be in a far better place. Chances are the most power hungry card we'd have today would be 5770 level.

    We need something more efficient like PowerVR to take us to the next level.

    Less brute force and more finesse.
  • therealnickdanger - Tuesday, March 8, 2011 - link

    Are you waiting to update your test system until the SATA port issue is corrected? Seems to me that anyone wanting to buy this card would also be using an overclocked 2600K... According to the Bench numbers, the 2600K offers roughly 30% more frames than the 920, depending on the game. That indicates to me that your test system is insufficient to properly test this card.

    Granted, since the vast majority of displays are fixed at 60Hz, fps counts beyond that don't really matter, but I have to wonder what impact this would have on folks with 120Hz-native LCDs. That extra 30% could make the difference.

    ... just sayin'. :)
  • Ryan Smith - Tuesday, March 8, 2011 - link

    At this point we're waiting on SNB-E. SNB is very nice, but for a GPU testbed the lack of PCIe bandwidth is an issue.

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