GRID 2

The final game in our benchmark suite is also our racing entry, Codemasters’ GRID 2. Codemasters continues to set the bar for graphical fidelity in racing games, and with GRID 2 they’ve gone back to racing on the pavement, bringing to life cities and highways alike. Based on their in-house EGO engine, GRID 2 includes a DirectCompute based advanced lighting system in its highest quality settings, which incurs a significant performance penalty but does a good job of emulating more realistic lighting within the game world.

For as good looking as GRID 2 is, it continues to surprise us just how easy it is to run with everything cranked up, even the DirectCompute lighting system and MSAA (Forward Rendering for the win!). At 2560 the 290X has the performance advantage by 9%, but we are getting somewhat academic since it’s 80fps versus 74fps, placing both well above 60fps. Though 120Hz gamers may still find the gap of interest.

Moving up to 4K, we can still keep everything turned up including the MSAA, while pulling off respectable single-GPU framerates and great multi-GPU framerates. To no surprise at this point, the 290X further extends its lead at 4K to 21%, but as usually is the case you really want two GPUs here to get the best framerates. In which case the 290X CF is the runaway winner, achieving a scaling factor of 96% at 4K versus NVIDIA’s 47%, and 97% versus 57% at 2560. This means the GTX 780 SLI is going to fall just short of 60fps once more at 4K, leaving the 290X CF alone at 99fps.

Unfortunately for AMD their drivers coupled with GRID 2 currently blows a gasket when trying to use 4K @ 60Hz, as GRID 2 immediately crashes when trying to load with 4K/Eyefinity enabled. We can still test at 30Hz, but those stellar 4K framerates aren’t going to be usable for gaming until AMD and Codemasters get that bug sorted out.

Finally, it’s interesting to note that for the 290X this is the game where it gains the least on the 280X. The 290X performance advantage here is just 20%, 5% lower than any other game and 10% lower than the average. The framerates at 2560 are high enough that this isn’t quite as important as in other games, but it does show that the 290X isn’t always going to maintain that 30% lead over its predecessor.

Without any capturable 4K FCAT frametimes, we’re left with the delta percentages at 2560, which more so than any other game are simply not in AMD’s favor. The GTX 780 SLI is extremely consistent here, to the point of being almost absurdly so for a multi-GPU setup. 4% is the kind of variance we expect to find with a single-GPU setup, not something incorporating multiple GPUs. AMD on the other hand, though improving over the 280X by a few percent, is merely adequate at 17%. The low frame times will further reduce the real world impact of the difference between the GTX 780 SLI and 290X CF here, but this is another game AMD could stand some improvements, even if it costs AMD some of the 290X’s very strong CF scaling factor.

Hitman: Absolution Synthetics
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  • Ytterbium - Thursday, October 24, 2013 - link

    The 290 is the binned version 290X is the top
  • Atiom - Thursday, October 24, 2013 - link

    Time to cut the Titan price to less than half!!!!!!
  • TheJian - Friday, October 25, 2013 - link

    Sure as soon as 290x gets the compute abilities in pro apps that Titan has (the Tesla side of Titan). 3 AAA games, less heat, less noise, less watts, physx, cuda, pro apps perf and 6GB of memory. All that adds up to HIGHER PRICING than 290x. Tesla is $2500.
  • MADDER1 - Thursday, October 24, 2013 - link

    Awesome! We need this for CPUs too!
  • Ytterbium - Thursday, October 24, 2013 - link

    I'd prefer the review was finished before posting.
  • Hxx - Thursday, October 24, 2013 - link

    why do people compare this to the titan? Nobody buys a titan card unless they absolutely must have the fastest nvidia card. Its like buying a Lambo. How many other cars can you buy with less money that are just as fast if not faster....its like bragging rights for geeks, or in Lambo's case bragging rights for rich old folks.
  • Gigaplex - Thursday, October 24, 2013 - link

    What does that have to do with the complaint that the review shouldn't be posted before it has been finished?
  • aTaoZ - Thursday, October 24, 2013 - link

    Looks like the 290X's power regulation is really working. It's able to run at a specific temperature.Because of it, many games will run at lower core frequencies than 1GHz. Once the non-reference cooling solutions arrive, there will be even more performance coming out of these cards.

    In LegitReview's article, they dropped the target temperature to 65 Celsius, and the performance seems to drop between 7-20% depending on application.
  • HisDivineOrder - Friday, October 25, 2013 - link

    I suspect the card was actually built to run at 80-85, but when they saw the performance wouldn't be hitting at Titan-killer levels, they boosted it to 95 and said, "Yeah, it'll hold."

    I think some custom coolers and especially water cooling should make this card fly, but the default cooler is one of those tragedies that just makes you shake your head.
  • Owls - Thursday, October 24, 2013 - link

    [comment in progress]

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