Battlefield 4

Our latest addition to our benchmark suite and our current major multiplayer action game of our benchmark suite is Battlefield 4, DICE’s 2013 multiplayer military shooter. After a rocky start, Battlefield 4 has finally reached a point where it’s stable enough for benchmark use, giving us the ability to profile one of the most popular and strenuous shooters out there. As these benchmarks are from single player mode, based on our experiences our rule of thumb here is that multiplayer framerates will dip to half our single player framerates, which means a card needs to be able to average at least 60fps if it’s to be able to hold up in multiplayer.

Battlefield 4 - 3840x2160 - Ultra Quality - 0x MSAA

Battlefield 4 - 3840x2160 - Medium Quality

Battlefield 4 - 2560x1440 - Ultra Quality

Battlefield 4 - 1920x1080 - Ultra Quality

Battlefield 4 is one of our tougher games, especially with the bar set at 60fps to give us enough headroom for multiplayer performance. To that end the GTX 980 turns in another solid performance, though the dream of averaging 60fps at 1440p Ultra is going to have to wait just a bit longer to be answered.

Overall on a competitive basis the GTX 980 looks very strong. Against the GTX 780 Ti it further improves on performance by 8-13%, 30%+ against GTX 780, and 66% against GTX 680. Similarly it fares well against AMD’s cards – even with their Mantle performance advantage – with the exception of one case: 4K at Medium quality. With maximum quality settings, at all resolutions the GTX 980 can outperform AMD’s best by around 15%. But in the case of 4K Medium, with the lesser shader overhead in particular the R9 290XU gets to pull ahead thanks to Mantle. At this point NVIDIA is losing by just 4%, but it goes to show how close the race between these two cards is going to be at times and why AMD is never too far behind NVIDIA in several of these games.

In any case for Ultra quality you’re looking at the GTX 980 being enough for 1080p and even 1440p if you flex the 60fps rule a bit. 4K at these settings though is going to be the domain of multi-GPU setups.

Battlefield 4 - Delta Percentages

Battlefield 4 - Surround/4K - Delta Percentages

Meanwhile delta percentage performance is extremely strong here. Everyone, incuding the GTX 980, is well below 3%.

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  • Laststop311 - Saturday, September 20, 2014 - link

    I'm going to wait for the custom gtx 980's. It was already throttling from reaching the 80C limit on most games. Blower design wouldn't of throttled if they left the vapor chamber in but they didnt. My case has plenty of airflow so i don't require a blower design. MSI twin frozr V open air design will cool the gpu much better and stop it from throttling during gaming. People rushing to buy the reference design are missing out on 100's of mhz due to thermal throttle.
  • chizow - Saturday, September 20, 2014 - link

    Yep the open-faced custom coolers are definitely better at OC'ing, especially in single-GPU configs, but the problems I have with them are:

    1) they tend to have cheaper build quality than the ref, especially the NVTTM cooler which is just classy stuff. The custom coolers replace this with lots and lots of plastic, visible heatpipes, cheapo looking fans. If I wanted an Arctic Accelero on my GPUs I would just buy one.

    2) they usually take longer to come to market. Frequently +3-6 weeks lead time. I know its not a super long time in the grand scheme of things, but I'd rather upgrade sooner.

    3) The blowers tend to do better in SLI over longer periods of time, and also don't impact your CPU temps/OC as much. I have a ton of airflow too (HAF-X) but I still prefer most of the heat being expelled from the start, and not through my H100i rad.

    4) Frankly I'm not too worried about squeezing the last 100-150MHz out of these chips. There was a time I might have been, but I tend to stick it to a safe OC about 100-150MHz below what most people are getting and then call it a day without having to do a dozen 3DMark loops to verify stability.
  • Laststop311 - Sunday, September 21, 2014 - link

    Did you see the benchmarks. Some games were running in the 900's some in the 1000's some in 1100's. Stuck at these frequencies because the card was riding the 80C limit. As the review mentioned these aren't the same titan coolers as they removed the vapor chamber and replaced it with regular heatpipes. Getting a custom cooled card isnt about squeezing the last 100-150 from an OC its about squeezing an extra 400-600 mhz from an OC as many reviewers have gotten the gtx 980 to OC to 1500mhz. We are talking a massive performance increase from getting the proper cooling bigger than even the r9 290x going from reference to custom and that was pretty big itself.
  • Laststop311 - Sunday, September 21, 2014 - link

    Even to get the card to reliably run at stock settings during intense gaming you need a custyom cooled card. The reference cooled card can't even reliably hit its stock clock under intense gaming because the blower cooler without vapor chamber sucks.
  • chizow - Sunday, September 21, 2014 - link

    No, you can adjust the Nvidia fan and GPU temp settings to get sustained Boosts. There is a trade-off in terms of fan noise and/or operating temps, but it is easy to get close to the results of the custom coolers at the expense of fan noise. I personally set my fan curve differently because I think Nvidia's 80C target temp profile is a little bit too passive in how quickly it ramps up fanspeeds. I don't expect to have any problems at all maintaining rated Boost speed, and if I want to overclock, I fully understand the sacrifice will be more fan noise over the custom coolers, but the rest of the negatives regarding custom coolers makes the reference cooler more appealing to me.
  • venk90 - Thursday, September 18, 2014 - link

    The GTX 980 page on NVIDIA website seems to indicate HDMI 1.4 as it says 3840*2160 at 30 Hz over HDMI (it is mentioned as a foot note). Are you sure about it being HDMI 2.0 ?
  • Ryan Smith - Thursday, September 18, 2014 - link

    Yes. I've confirmed it in writing and in person.
  • vegitto4 - Thursday, September 18, 2014 - link

    Hi Ryan, great review! There will be the usual HTPC perspective? For example, did they fix the 23.976 refresh rate as Haswell does? I think it's important to know how these work as htpc cards. Regards
  • Ryan Smith - Thursday, September 18, 2014 - link

    For this article there will not. These cards aren't your traditional HTPC cards. However we can possibly look into it for next week's follow-up.
  • chizow - Friday, September 19, 2014 - link

    I think the definition of HTPC is beginning to change though, and while these may not yet fit into traditional HTPC (Brix and NUC seem to be filling this niche more), they are definitely right in the SteamBox/BattleBox category.

    Honestly, SteamBox was the first thing that came to mind when I saw that 165W TDP on the GTX 980, we will be seeing a lot of GM204 variants in the upcoming years in SFF, LAN, SteamBox and gaming laptop form factors that is for sure.

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