Company of Heroes 2

Our second benchmark in our benchmark suite is Relic Games’ Company of Heroes 2, the developer’s World War II Eastern Front themed RTS. For Company of Heroes 2 Relic was kind enough to put together a very strenuous built-in benchmark that was captured from one of the most demanding, snow-bound maps in the game, giving us a great look at CoH2’s performance at its worst. Consequently if a card can do well here then it should have no trouble throughout the rest of the game.

Unlike Metro, Company of Heroes 2 isn’t a title that the 290X gets throttled by nearly as much in our benchmarking, but it’s still something that once again demonstrates just how close 290 gets to 290X. 290 trails 290X by just 5%, a far cry from the $150 difference in price tags. Meanwhile because this is a game that AMD cards are doing so well in, the 290 also fares extremely well against the GTX 780, surpassing it by 23%. The performance gaps versus the 280X and GTX 770 are even larger yet, at 34% and 55% respectively.

Minimum framerates are similarly in AMD’s favor. On a relative basis the 290 falls behind the 290X by a little more here – by about 7% – due to the shader heavy workload of this benchmark’s most difficult scene, but that’s still only 7% behind a card 38% more expensive. Or to once again draw a GTX 780 comparison, it’s 33% faster.

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  • just4U - Wednesday, November 6, 2013 - link

    You have to ask yourself is Ryan biased with Nvidia or AMD... or maybe it's simply just his tolerance for noise that is the issue.

    Anyway.. people buying these cards will have some options. For me the 95C is a no go as is the noise. Something I'd tolerate until a good aftermarket solution could be implemented. AMD and Nvidia (until their titan reference cooler) have always been a little meh.. with reference coolers. We all know this..

    My last two cards have been AMD ones and if I was in the market for a card today I'd go straight for the Nvidia 780. Not because of it's speeds, certainly not because of its drivers, and not because I am a fan. I simply like their kickass reference cooler and games bundle.

    Im not in the market though lol. Quite happy with my Radeon 7870.. and not looking to upgrade yet.
  • jbs181818 - Thursday, November 7, 2013 - link

    With all that power consumption, what size PSU is required? Assuming 1 GPU and a haswell CPU, 1 SSD.
  • dwade123 - Thursday, November 7, 2013 - link

    290x doesn't make sense when the cheaper 290 performs almost identical. And neither can max out Crysis 3. Gamers are better off waiting for real next-gen cards like Maxwell, and with next-gen console ports coming in 2014 suggests it is common sense to do so.
  • polaco - Tuesday, November 12, 2013 - link

    "neither can max out Crysis 3" what the hell are you talking about?
    52 fps at 2560x1440 HQ + FXAA
    77 fps at 1920x1080 HQ + FXAA
    with that line of thinking then nor 780 or Titan are worthy since fps diff is minimal

    "gamers are better off waiting for real next-gen cards like Maxwell"
    well, 290 and 290X are AMD true next gen cards, maybe you feel fooled by having bought a 780 for almost 700 bucks and then you feel like Maxwell will relief that pain, or maybe you work for NVidia marketing deparment... for the time NVidia came out with it AMD will be pushing their next gen too, will you recommend waiting then too? so we wait forever then uh?
    "and with next-gen console ports coming in 2014 suggests it is common sense to do so"
    you mean to wait for NVidia card to run games that will be optimized to AMD hardware that is inside every next gen console?
    please go to see a doctor....
  • TempAccount007 - Saturday, November 9, 2013 - link

    Who the hell uses a reference cooler on any AMD card? The only people that buy reference cards are those who are going to water cool them.
  • NA1NSXR - Monday, November 11, 2013 - link

    If I was in the market for a card I'd wait until the aftermarket cooler designs come out. Should make the noise and temp situation a little more bearable. Still, the proprietary nVidia value-adds like HBAO+, adative vsync, TXAA, etc. are hard to give up for me. It is a hard call. If the 780 was only $50 more than the 290 I'd take the 780, but since the difference is $100....I don't know. Really tough call.
  • beck2448 - Tuesday, November 12, 2013 - link

    Too noisy and hot.
  • devilskreed - Tuesday, November 12, 2013 - link

    Hail High AMD..The gamers saviour!!!
    Hail High AMD..The price/performance king
    Hail High AMD..The peoples choice..

    Healthy competition from AMD's side,i stopped buying nvidia after 8800GT :p purely due to price/performance benefits that AMD offers..
  • bloodbones - Thursday, November 14, 2013 - link

    The battle between amd ex ati and nvidia has been around since i was 18 years old and i am 30 now. Over the years i have try a huge numbers of video cards from both companies and the only conclusion is that things have always been the same, nothing change over the years: more or less the same performance and:
    Nvidia = more expensive cards but more quality cards, lower noise levels lower temps
    Ati/Amd = cheaper cards with higher noise levels higher temps
    Period.
  • horse07 - Thursday, November 14, 2013 - link

    Guys, when will you update the 2013 GPU benchmarks with the recent R7/R9 and 700 series?

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