Bioshock Infinite

Bioshock Infinite is Irrational Games’ latest entry in the Bioshock franchise. Though it’s based on Unreal Engine 3 – making it our obligatory UE3 game – Irrational had added a number of effects that make the game rather GPU-intensive on its highest settings. As an added bonus it includes a built-in benchmark composed of several scenes, a rarity for UE3 engine games, so we can easily get a good representation of what Bioshock’s performance is like.

Bioshock is another strong showing for the GTX 780, both against the 7970GE and the GTX 580. In the case of the former the GTX 780 leads by 30%, while against the GTX 580 it leads by 96%, falling just short of doubling the GTX 580’s performance again. Overall the framerate of 61.9fps makes this the slowest card that can do 60fps at 2560 at the game’s highest settings, and one of the only two single-GPU cards that can perform such a feat.

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  • aidivn - Thursday, May 23, 2013 - link

    so, how many Double Precision units are there in each SMX unit of gtx780? titan had 64 dp units in each of their SMX units which totaled to 896 dp units

    And can u turn them on or off from the forcewre driver menu like “CUDA – Double Precision” for gtx780?
  • Ryan Smith - Thursday, May 23, 2013 - link

    Hardware wise this is GK110, so the 64 DP units are there. But most of them would be disabled to get the 1/24 FP64 rate.
  • aidivn - Friday, May 24, 2013 - link

    so how many are disabled and how many are enabled (numbers please)?
  • Ryan Smith - Friday, May 24, 2013 - link

    You would have only 1/8th enabled. So 8 per SMX are enabled, while the other 56 are disabled.
  • aidivn - Saturday, May 25, 2013 - link

    so, the GTX780 only has 96 DP units enabled while the GTX TITAN has 896 DP units enabled...thats a huge cut on double precision
  • DanNeely - Sunday, May 26, 2013 - link

    That surprised me too. Previously the cards based on the G*100/110 cards were 1/8; this is a major hit vs the 580/480/280 series cards.
  • Old_Fogie_Late_Bloomer - Thursday, May 23, 2013 - link

    "GTX 780 on the other hand is a pure gaming/consumer part like the rest of the GeForce lineup, meaning NVIDIA has stripped it of Titan’s marquee compute feature: uncapped double precision (FP64) performance. As a result GTX 780 can offer 90% of GTX Titan’s gaming performance, but it can only offer a fraction of GTX Titan’s FP64 compute performance, topping out at 1/24th FP32 performance rather than 1/3rd like Titan."

    Seriously, this is just...it's asinine. Utterly asinine.
  • tipoo - Thursday, May 23, 2013 - link

    Market segmentation is nothing new. The Titan really is a steal if you need DP, the next card up is 2400 dollars.
  • Old_Fogie_Late_Bloomer - Thursday, May 23, 2013 - link

    I'm well aware of the existence of market segmentation, but this is just ridiculous. Putting ECC RAM on professional cards is segmentation. Disabling otherwise functional features of hardware, most likely in the software drivers...that's just...ugh.
  • SymphonyX7 - Thursday, May 23, 2013 - link

    I just noticed that the Radeon HD 7970 Ghz Edition has been trouncing the GTX 680 in most of the benchmarks and trailing the GTX 680 in those benchmarks that traditionally favored Kepler. What the heck just happened? Didn't the review of the Radeon HD 7970 Ghz Edition say that it was basically tied with the GTX 680?

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