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 - Medium Quality

Metro: Last Light - 2560x1440 - High Quality

Metro: Last Light - 1920x1080 - Very High Quality

As has become customary for us for the last couple of high-end video card reviews, we’re going to be running all of our 4K video card benchmarks at both high quality and at a lower quality level. In practice not even GTX 980 is going to be fast enough to comfortably play most of these games at 3840x2160 with everything cranked up – that is going to be multi-GPU territory – so for that reason we’re including a lower quality setting to showcase just what performance looks like at settings more realistic for a single GPU.

GTX 980 comes out swinging in our first set of benchmarks. If there was any doubt that it could surpass the likes of R9 290XU and GTX 780 Ti, then this first benchmark is a great place to set those doubts to rest. At all resolutions and quality settings it comes out on top, surpassing NVIDIA’s former consumer flagship by anywhere from a few percent to 12% at 4K with high quality settings. Otherwise against the R9 290XU it’s a consistent 13% lead at 2560 and 4K Medium.

In absolute terms this is enough performance to keep its average framerates well over 60fps at 2560, and even at 3840 Medium it comes just short of crossing the 60fps mark. High quality mode will take the wind out of GTX 980’s sails though, pushing framerates back into the borderline 30fps range.

Looking at NVIDIA’s last-generation parts for a moment, the performance gains over the lower tier GK110 based GTX 780 are around 25-35%. This is about where you’d expect to see a new GTX x80 card given NVIDIA’s quasi-regular 2 year performance upgrade cadence. And when extended out to a full 2 years, the performance advantage over GTX 680 is anywhere between 60% and 92% depending on the resolution we’re looking at. NVIDIA proclaims that GTX 980 will achieve 2x the performance per watt of GTX 680, and since GTX 980 is designed to operate at a lower TDP than GTX 680, as we can see it means performance over GTX 680 won’t quite be doubled in most cases.

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  • Ryan Smith - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    D'oh! Thanks.
  • Mr Perfect - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    What revision Display Ports are those, 1.2 or 1.3? I see that the 1.3s had a launch article on AT earlier this week, any chance they made it into Maxwell along with HDMI 2?
  • Mr Perfect - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    Oh, they're 1.2. It's listed on the 980 board review, but I was looking in the architecture section.
  • martixy - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    Page 6(Better AA: Dynamic Super Resolution & Multi-Frame Sampled Anti-Aliasing) of the article is MISSING(for me only?).
    What's up with that?
  • Mr Perfect - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    Missing here too, they must still be uploading things.
  • wolfman3k5 - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    They should fix their back-end database issues...
  • Laststop311 - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    read the entire article and maybe you would know why
  • Harnser - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    Are we going to see a Maxwell 2 version of the GTX 750 Ti? HDMI2 and the better AA would be great additions.
  • Samus - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    Ryan,

    Page 3, 2nd/3rd paragraph refer to GM107 when you meant to refer to GM204

    ;)
  • Ranger90125 - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link


    The R290X was branded "Loud" in Anandtech's review (comment subsequently removed) and while token gestures of approval were made in that article, Mr Smith did seem to go out of his way to under-emphasise the strong points of that card. Now we have the "Mighty Maxwell," review, and unsurprisingly Mr Smith is waxing lyrical about the virtues of his favourite company's flagship GPU. Any reader who has read Anandtech's reviews of the R290X and GTX980 must surely recognise the blatant bias in Nvidia's favour. Having been an avid reader of Anandtech's articles for many years, one hopes the recent departure of it's founding father will not precipitate an all time low in the quality of Anandtech's GPU coverage. I encourage Mr Smith to temper his bias in forthcoming Gpu reviews, if only to prevent an exodus of Anandtech's faithful to sites that are capable of providing a balanced perspective on the ongoing battle between Nvidia and AMD GPUs.

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