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.

Company of Heroes 2 - 1920x1080 - High Quality + Low AA

Company of Heroes 2 - 1920x1080 - Low Quality

Company of Heroes 2 is a game that has consistently favored AMD’s GPUs, so the outcome here is no surprise. The R7 260 is performance competitive with the otherwise much more expensive GTX 660, leaving the R7 265 to happy stomp all over every NVIDIA card on this chart.

On a side note, for Radeon 5700 series owners looking for an AMD card that can double their performance for under $150, it looks like AMD has finally delivered, as evidenced by the performance of the R7 265 in this and other games. We’re looking at a fairly consistent 100% increase in performance here, which this coming some 4 years after the 5770 launched at $159 is clearly a long wait, but it does happen to coincide nicely with the 4 year upgrade cycle that many video card buyers are on these days.

Company of Heroes 2 - Min. Frame Rate - 1920x1080 - High Quality + Low AA

Company of Heroes 2 - Min. Frame Rate - 1920x1080 - Low Quality

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  • Death666Angel - Thursday, February 13, 2014 - link

    Who is surprised by that? No one that is following GPU reviews since multi-monitors became a thing for the consumer crowd. The first few generations had issues with monitors flickering in a multi-monitor setup because of too aggressive down clocking, so now they are being very conservative there and increase the clocks quite a bit.
  • Solid State Brain - Thursday, February 13, 2014 - link

    I don't think it's acceptable, though. AMD might have reduced idle consumption when a single monitor is being driven, but is still neglecting other usage scenarios that are becoming increasingly common. It's not even just a small power difference, especially with medium to high-end video cards.
  • Da W - Thursday, February 13, 2014 - link

    STFU.
    Anandtech had no problem calling 290 - 290X a terrible card because of its blower and the NOISE and crowning Nvidia once again. Much more now with AMD price hike.

    The only biased guy here is YOU Nvidia fanboy.
  • silverblue - Thursday, February 13, 2014 - link

    I don't think the price hikes are AMD's fault per se, however considering the inflated prices due to bitmining, you'd definitely want a better cooler than the stock one. The third party cards handle this nicely.
  • Da W - Thursday, February 13, 2014 - link

    My last post was directed to HisDivineOrder but the reply button doesn't seem to place my reply below his post.
  • formulav8 - Thursday, February 13, 2014 - link

    They always complain when something good is said about AMD whether the good is justified or not justified. They don't care either way.
  • SolMiester - Thursday, February 13, 2014 - link

    If this is just the 7xxx rebadge, then I guess it has the same multi GPU frame pacing issues....LOL, why dont they fix the damn thing FFS!...no CF Eyefinity, no DX9 pacing.....still shit!
  • fiasse - Thursday, February 13, 2014 - link

    Typo 'and R7 270 holding at $179 (MSRP)'
  • Mr Perfect - Thursday, February 13, 2014 - link

    With the naming of the card being so close to the 260X, I was really hoping this would be a faster GN1.1 part. How does AMD expect TrueAudio to catch on if they keep releasing card that don't support it? Hopefully the 300 series will sort this out and I can grab one to play Thief on.
  • fiasse - Thursday, February 13, 2014 - link

    looks like another typo on Asus R7 260 page, 'but this is an especially treacherous position if R7 260X prices quickly come down to $199.'

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