Metro: Last Light

As always, kicking off our look at performance is 4A Games’ latest entry in their Metro series of subterranean shooters, Metro: Last Light. The original Metro: 2033 was a graphically punishing game for its time and Metro: Last Light is in its own right too. On the other hand it scales well with resolution and quality settings, so it’s still playable on lower end hardware.

Metro: Last Light - 3840x2160 - High Quality

Metro: Last Light - 3840x2160 - Low Quality

Metro: Last Light - 2560x1440 - High Quality

Our first gaming benchmark pretty much sets the tone for what we’ll be seeing in this review. In building the 295X2 AMD set out to build a single card that could match the performance of the 290X “Uber” In Crossfire, and that is exactly what we see happening here. The 295X2 and 290XU CF swap places due to run-to-run variation, but ultimately both tie together, whether it’s above the GTX 780 Ti SLI or below it.

As we’ve already seen with the 290X, thanks in part to AMD’s ROP advantage, AMD’s strong suit is in very high resolutions. This leads to the 295X2 edging out the competition at 2160p, while being edged out itself at 1440p. None the less between AMD and NVIDIA setups this is a very close fight thus far, and will be throughout. As for Metro, even at the punishing resolution of 2160, the 295X2 is fast enough to keep this game going at above 50fps.

The Test Company of Heroes 2
Comments Locked

131 Comments

View All Comments

  • mpdugas - Wednesday, April 9, 2014 - link

    Time for two power supplies in this kind of build...
  • rikm - Wednesday, April 9, 2014 - link

    huh?, no giveaway? why do I read this stuff?
    ok, seriously, love these reviews, but the thing I never understand is when they say Titan is better, but the charts seem to say the opposite, at least for compute.
  • lanskywalker - Wednesday, April 9, 2014 - link

    That card is a sexy beast.
  • jimjamjamie - Thursday, April 10, 2014 - link

    Great effort from AMD, I wish they would focus on efficiency though - I feel with the changing computing climate and the shift to mobile that power-hungry components should be niche, not the norm.

    Basically, a dual-750ti card would be lovely :)
  • IUU - Saturday, April 12, 2014 - link

    The sad thing about all this, is that the lowest resolution for these cards is considered to be the 2560x1440 one(for those who understand).
    Bigger disappointment yet, that after so many years of high expectations, the gpu still stands as a huge piece of silicon inside the pc that's firmly chained by the IT industry to serve gamers only.
    Whatever the reason for no such consumer applications,thiis is a crime, mildly put.
  • RoboJ1M - Thursday, May 1, 2014 - link

    The 4870 stories that were written here by Anand were my most memorable and favourite.
    That and the SSD saga.

    Everybody loves a good Giant Killer story.

    But the "Small Die Strategy" has long since ended?
    When did that end?
    Why did that end? I mean, it worked so well, didn't it?
  • patrickjp93 - Friday, May 2, 2014 - link

    People should be warned: the performance of this card is nowhere close to what the benchmarks or limited tests suggest. Even on the newest Asrock Motherboard the PCI v3 lanes bottleneck this about 40%. If you're just going to sequentially transform the same data once it's on the card, yes, you have this performance, which is impressive for the base cost, though entirely lousy for the Flop/Watt. But, if you're going to attempt to be moving 8GB of data to and from the CPU and GPU continuously, this card performs marginally better than the 290. The busses are bridge chips are going to need to get much faster for these cards to be really useful for anything outside purely graphical applications in the future. It's pretty much a waste for GPGPU computing.
  • patrickjp93 - Friday, May 2, 2014 - link

    *The busses AND bridge chips...* Seriously what chat forum doesn't let you edit your comments?
  • Gizmosis350k - Sunday, May 4, 2014 - link

    I wonder if Quad CF works with these
  • Blitzninjasensei - Saturday, July 12, 2014 - link

    I'm trying to imagine what kind of person would have 4 of these and why, maybe EyeFinity with 4k? Even then your CPU would bottleneck way before that, you would need some kind of motherboard with dual CPU slots and a game that can take advantage of it.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now