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 is another game that has been favoring AMD’s GCN architecture over NVIDIA’s Kepler architecture, albeit less so than Crysis. The results still have the GTX 660 Ti struggling, but now it’s at least clearly ahead of the 7870, beating it by 7%. The 7950 however leads by similar 7%, which means the GTX 660 Ti is splitting the difference and is not competitive enough in this game.

The factory overclocked cards on the other hand show us that there is some hope for GTX 660 Ti, even with its memory bus castration. Both the Gigabyte and Zotac cards can edge out the 7950, an important distinction since they need to justify costing about as much as a 7950. At the same time this is part of the reason why AMD felt the need to do the 7950B, since only the B can outpace overclocked GTX 660 Ti cards.

Crysis: Warhead DiRT 3
Comments Locked

313 Comments

View All Comments

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

    Long story short, we were having CMS problems earlier so we were messing with the URL slugs. Not that the slugs actually matter, but it's been fixed.
  • Belard - Thursday, August 16, 2012 - link

    Slugs are important for soil health. slimy and kind of icky looking... they are good to have.
  • Natfly - Thursday, August 16, 2012 - link

    Not to mention search engine optimization
  • Belard - Thursday, August 16, 2012 - link

    I see that.... oops.
  • bhima - Thursday, August 16, 2012 - link

    You show $399, but the MSRP is $319.
  • CeriseCogburn - Sunday, August 19, 2012 - link

    A lot of em are going for $299, but why put anything in there but RELEASE PRICE on the chart - that way you can show the GTX570 at $349.
    Bias ? You decide.
  • BoloMKXXVIII - Thursday, August 16, 2012 - link

    blanarahul, very insiteful comment.

    The GTX 660 Ti seems like a good "bang for your buck" card. NVidia should count itself lucky for having trouble keeping up with demand. My worry is they lose focus with the number of markets they are trying to fill. Something I am sure AMD will be watching for.
  • CeriseCogburn - Sunday, August 19, 2012 - link

    Yes nVidia sure loses focus - uhh... loses focus...sales GREAT - loses focus...
    Biased stupidity ?
    You decide.
    What it means ?
    No one knows.
  • Galidou - Tuesday, August 21, 2012 - link

    They're not loosing focus, it's a new strategy and it must work wonders. Instead of releasing new products as quickly as possible and fill the market with all the parts from low to high-end performance, they get out the new higher-end parts and rely on their last gen cards to fill the holes.

    Clean out the shelves so dealers don't get stuck with older technology not selling. And at the same time, not taxing new fabrication process(28nm in this case) by needing alot more to fill demand in every way.
  • Crazyeyeskillah - Thursday, August 16, 2012 - link

    If they had released this at 249$ they would have never been able to supply the demand. . .why not just go for the jugular of amd? Oh yeah balance and perceived value in the market, only hurts us really.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now