Metro 2033

Paired with Crysis as our second behemoth FPS is Metro: 2033. Metro gives up Crysis’ lush tropics and frozen wastelands for an underground experience, but even underground it can be quite brutal on GPUs, which is why it’s also our new benchmark of choice for looking at power/temperature/noise during a game. If its sequel due this year is anywhere near as GPU intensive then a single GPU may not be enough to run the game with every quality feature turned up.

Metro: 2033 - 2560x1600 - DX11 Very High Quality + AAA/16xAF

Metro: 2033 - 1920x1200 - DX11 Very High Quality + AAA/16xAF

Metro: 2033 - 1680x1050 - DX10 High Quality + 16xAF

Thankfully for NVIDIA Metro is much, much better than Crysis for the GTX 680. The GTX 680 still trails the 7970 by a few percent at 2560, but it’s now clearly ahead of the 7950. Performance relative to the GTX 580 is far better, with the GTX 680 leading by 34%. In our experience Metro is very shader heavy, and this would appear to be confirmation of that as the GTX 680 has far greater shader resources than GTX 580.

What’s particularly interesting here though is that the GTX 680 has nearly caught up with the GTX 590. NVIDIA’s SLI scaling for Metro isn’t particularly fantastic, but it’s still quite a leap compared to the GTX 580. Consequently this is the first sign that the GTX 680 can compete with the GTX 590, which would be quite an accomplishment.

Crysis: Warhead DiRT 3
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  • Targon - Thursday, March 22, 2012 - link

    Many people have been blasting AMD for price vs performance in the GPU arena in the current round of fighting. The thing is, until now, AMD had no competition, so it was expected that the price would remain high until NVIDIA released their new generation. So, expect lower prices from AMD to be released in the next week.

    You also fail to realize that with a 3 month lead, AMD is that much closer to the refresh parts being released that will beat NVIDIA for price vs. performance. Power draw may still be higher from the refresh parts, but that will be addressed for the next generation.

    Now, you and others have been claiming that NVIDIA is somehow blowing AMD out of the water in terms of performance, and that is NOT the case. Yes, the 680 is faster, but isn't so much faster that AMD couldn't EASILY counter with a refresh part that catches up or beats the 680 NEXT WEEK. The 7000 series has a LOT of overclocking room there.

    So, keep things in perspective. A 3 percent performance difference isn't enough to say that one is so much better than the other. It also remains to be seen how quickly the new NVIDIA parts will be made available.
  • SlyNine - Thursday, March 22, 2012 - link

    I still blast them, I'm not happy with the price/performance increase of this generation at all.
  • Unspoken Thought - Thursday, March 22, 2012 - link

    Finally! Logic! But it still falls on deaf ears. We finally see both sides getting their act together to get minimum features sets in, and we can't see passed our own bias squabbles.

    How about we continue to push these manufactures in what we want and need most; more features, better algorithms, and last and most important, revolutionize and find new way to render, aside from vector based rendering.

    Lets start incorporating high level mathematics for fluid dynamics and the such. They have already absorbed PhysX and moved to Direct Compute. Lets see more realism in games!

    Where is the Technological Singularity when you need one.
  • CeriseCogburn - Thursday, March 22, 2012 - link

    Well, the perspective I have is amd had a really lousy (without drivers) and short 2.5 months when the GTX580 wasn't single core king w GTX590 dual core king and the latter still is and the former has been replaced by the GTX680.
    So right now Nvidia is the asbolute king, and before now save that very small time period Nvidia was core king for what with the 580 .. 1.5 years ?
    That perspective is plain fact.
    FACTS- just stating those facts makes things very clear.
    We already have heard the Nvidia monster die is afoot - that came out with "all the other lies" that turned out to be true...
    I don't fail to realize anything - I just have a clear mind about what has happened.
    I certainly hope AMD has a new better core slapped down very soon, a month would be great.
    Until AMD is really winning, it's LOSING man, it's LOSING!
  • CeriseCogburn - Thursday, March 22, 2012 - link

    Since amd had no competition for 2.5 months and that excuses it's $569.99 price, then certainly the $500 price on the GTX580 that had no competition for a full year and a half was not an Nvidia fault, right ? Because you're a fair person and "finally logic!" is what another poster supported you with...
    So thanks for saying the GTX580 was never priced too high because it has no competition for 1.5 years.

  • Unspoken Thought - Saturday, March 24, 2012 - link

    Honestly the only thing I was supporting was the fact he is showing that perspective changes everything. a fact exacerbated when bickering over marginal differences that are driven by the economy when dealing with price vs performance.

    Both of you have valid arguments, but it sounds like you just want to feel better about supporting nVidia.

    You should be able to see how AMD achieved its goals with nVidia following along playing leap frog. Looking at benchmarks, no it doesn't beat it in everything and both are very closely matched in power consumption, heat, and noise. Features are where nVidia shine and get my praise. but I would not fault you if you had either card.
  • CeriseCogburn - Friday, April 6, 2012 - link

    Ok Targon, now we know TiN put the 1.3V core on the 680 and it OC'ed on air to 1,420 core, surpassing every 7970 1.3V core overclock out there.
    Furthermore, Zotac has put out the 2,000Ghz 680 edition...
    So it appears the truth comes down to the GTX680 has more left in the core than the 7970.
    Nice try but no cigar !
    Nice spin but amd does not win !
    Nice prediction, but it was wrong.
  • SlyNine - Thursday, March 22, 2012 - link

    Go back and look at the benchmarks idiot. 7970 wins in some situations.
  • SlyNine - Thursday, March 22, 2012 - link

    In Crysis max, 7970 gets 36 FPS while the 680 only gets 30 FPS.

    Yes, some how the 7970 is losing. LOOK AT THE NUMBERS, HELLO!!???

    Metro 2033 the 7970 gets 38 and the 680 gets 37. But yet in your eyes another loss for the 7970...

    7970 kills it in certian GPU Compute, and has hardware H.264 encoding.

    In a couple of games, which you already get massive FPS with both, the 680 boasts much much higher FPS. But than in games where you need the FPS the 7970 wins. Hmmm

    But no no, you're right, the 680 is total elite top shit.
  • eddieroolz - Friday, March 23, 2012 - link

    You pretty much admitted that 7970 loses in a lot of other cases by stating that:

    "7970 kills it in certain GPU compute..."

    Adding the word modifier "certain" to describe a win is like admitting defeat in every other compute situation.

    Even for the games, you can only mention 2 out of what, 6 games where 7970 wins by a <10% margin. Meanwhile, GTX 680 proceeds to maul the 7970 by >15% in at least 2 of the games.

    Yes, 7970 is full of win, indeed! /s

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