The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim

Bethesda's epic sword & magic game The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim is our RPG of choice for benchmarking. It's altogether a good CPU benchmark thanks to its complex scripting and AI, but it also can end up pushing a large number of fairly complex models and effects at once, especially with the addition of the high resolution texture pack.

For every Portal 2 you have a Skyrim, it seems. At 1920 the GTX 660 Ti actually does well for itself here, besting the 7900 series, but we know from experience that this is a CPU limited resolution. Cranking things up to 2560 and Ultra quality sends the GTX 660 Ti through the floor in a very bad way, pushing it well below even the 7870, never mind the 7900 series.

Altogether the GTX 660 Ti achieves about 80% of the performance of the GTX 670, making this another game that is hurt badly by the loss of a ROP block and memory bandwidth. At the same time the GTX 670 is the first NVIDIA card fast enough to compete with the 7950, so the GTX 660 Ti came into this benchmark with unfavorable odds. 68fps is more than playable, but hardcore Skyrim players are going to want to stick to cards with more memory bandwidth. At best, the bright spot for NVIDIA is that the GTX 660 Ti is nearly 100% faster than the GTX 560 Ti, a remarkable improvement, but also one being fueled by the meager 1GB of VRAM the latter has.

As for our factory overclocked cards, this is another case of Zotac leading the pack. Its memory overclock is exactly what’s needed to counter the GTX 660 Ti’s lack of memory bandwidth, which helps it easily clear EVGA and Gigabyte’s cards.

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  • Ryan Smith - Thursday, August 16, 2012 - link

    For the Zotac card we merely need to reduce the clockspeeds. NVIDIA has an enforced voltage limit of 1.175v, so the voltages are identical for both reference cards and factory overclocked cards.
  • Galcobar - Thursday, August 16, 2012 - link

    Ah, dagnabit, meant to say "as I understand NVIDIA's base/boost clock implementation."
  • Galcobar - Thursday, August 16, 2012 - link

    If the base clock isn't affected by the software, would that not skew the results or are you expecting the card never to operate at the overclocked base clock?
  • Ryan Smith - Friday, August 17, 2012 - link

    I'm not sure I follow you. The base clock is affected by software. We have full control over the base clock through clock offsets.
  • just4U - Thursday, August 16, 2012 - link

    I was hoping these cards would come in under the $250 price point. I don't really see them as substantially lower at $300. If I were in the market for a card today I'd probably settle on the 7950 over the 660TI as it looks like it has room to grow with better drivers.. and seems like the 3G might actually benifit it in the long run.. or I'd just get a 670 and call it a day.
  • Pixelpusher6 - Thursday, August 16, 2012 - link

    "Otherwise the memory layout is the same as the reference GTX 660 Ti with 6 chips on the front and 8 on the back." - page 5

    Ok I'm confused here because a few pages back it said:

    "The only difference we can find on this PCB is that instead of there being solder pads for 16 memory chips there are solder pads for 12, reflecting the fact that the GTX 660 Ti can have at most 12 memory chips attached."

    I get that this is a custom PCB so it might vary from the reference PCB but I don't understand how it can be equipped with 14 memory chips and if it is then is it a mix of 2Gb and 1Gb chips? Can you please explain?

    Also for people that are referencing the 7870 on newegg at $250 can you please provide a link because the cheapest card I found was @ $279.99 AFTER a mail in rebate. Seems to me to be sitting much closer to $300 than $250.

    Overall I was surprised by the performance of this card, I figured it would be a dog in games like Metro 2033 and Crysis having that extra ROP unit / memory bus cut down.
  • Ryan Smith - Thursday, August 16, 2012 - link

    That was meant to be 2 on the back, not 8. Sorry about that.
  • seasick - Friday, August 17, 2012 - link

    they've tweaked gk104 resulting a new chip more of a gk105 ..lol
    but this card gtx660ti is shitt
    a highly overclocked would beat it(maybe 2fps more but who care)...and is $60 less ...this card is made for gamers who wants efficiency more than performance
    right now the hd7950 is the best vfm card followed by gtx670
  • TheJian - Monday, August 20, 2012 - link

    Can you prove anything you've said? Links to reviews showing this please. You can overclock the 660TI also. I backed my opinion all over this comment section. I'd be more than happy to look at some data if you have ANY. No 2560x1600 though, I already proved nobody uses it. No 24in sold that use it on newegg. No 27's go that high either...ROFL. Please...LInks and data.

    The 660TI is the best VFM card for 98% of us. We don't run in 2560x1600.
  • CeriseCogburn - Sunday, August 19, 2012 - link

    No they cannot, they just lie a lot.
    Now the 7950 has "easily a 35% to 45% overclock out of the box- or a 50% overclock easily".

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