Dragon Age: Inquisition

Our RPG of choice for 2015 is Dragon Age: Inquisition, the latest game in the Dragon Age series of ARPGs. Offering an expansive world that can easily challenge even the best of our video cards, Dragon Age also offers us an alternative take on EA/DICE’s Frostbite 3 engine, which powers this game along with Battlefield 4.

Dragon Age: Inquisition - 3840x2160 - Ultra Quality - 0x MSAA

Dragon Age: Inquisition - 3840x2160 - High Quality

Dragon Age: Inquisition - 2560x1440 - Ultra Quality - 0x MSAA

Once again turning down Frostbite’s performance-crushing MSAA, what we find at 4K with Ultra quality is that the GTX Titan X is once more hitting framerates in the 40fps range. At 41.7fps the GTX Titan X is the only single-GPU card to average better than 30fps at these settings, with the next-closest card being the GTX 980 at exactly 30fps. Overall the GTX Titan X does particularly well at 4K Ultra, beating the GTX 980 by 39%, the GTX 780 Ti by 53%, and the R9 290XU by 44%.

Users looking for higher framerates can either turn down the quality setting one notch to high, which gets us 54.4fps from the GTX Titan, or drop down to 1440p, which is good for 79.3fps. Meanwhile our multi-GPU configurations once again make their presence felt. At 4K High quality both the GTX 980 SLI are over 60fps, however the GTX Titan X unexpectedly beats the R9 295X2 at 1440p.

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  • Antronman - Thursday, March 19, 2015 - link

    The Titan has always been marketed as a hybrid between a gaming and graphics development card.
  • H3ld3r - Thursday, March 19, 2015 - link

    Agree 100%
  • H3ld3r - Thursday, March 19, 2015 - link

    http://tpucdn.com/reviews/NVIDIA/GeForce_GTX_Titan...
  • Evarin - Thursday, March 19, 2015 - link

    For people thinking that VRAM is unneeded, you must not be heavy into modding. Especially with Fallout 4 and GTA 5 on the horizon, massive amounts of room for texture mods will come in handy.
  • Black Obsidian - Thursday, March 19, 2015 - link

    6-8GB would seem to meet that requirement nicely.

    As is often the case with "doubled RAM" models, by the time that 12GB of VRAM is useful, we'll be a couple of generations down the road, and cards with 12GB of VRAM will be much faster, much cheaper, or both.

    Maybe at that point a Titan X owner could pick up a cheap used card and run them in SLI, but even then they're laying out more money than a user who buys a $500 card every couple of years and has the VRAM he/she needs when it's actually useful.
  • H3ld3r - Thursday, March 19, 2015 - link

    I agree with you but don't forget how vram is used in sli and cf. Vram of gpu 1 mirrors vram of 0 so if have 2x 4gb you're only taking advantage of 4gb. Anyway i prefer fast ram than hughe amounts of it.
  • Evarin - Thursday, March 19, 2015 - link

    We've already had a game which called for 6GB VRAM for an advanced texture pack. Imagine an Elder Scrolls or a Fallout where every single object in the game has a 4k resolution texture. I think it'd be a challenge even for the titan.
  • Antronman - Sunday, March 22, 2015 - link

    The way that RAM works is the worse your system is, the more RAM you end up needing.

    There are plateaus, but as GPUs get faster you need less VRAM to store the same amount of information.

    The Titan X is much faster than the Titan BE, and thus needs less VRAM, assuming that the application is the same.

    Then we get into Direct X 12 and Vulkan. They're supposed to increase efficiency all-around, reducing the demand for resources like RAM and cores even more.
  • Death666Angel - Thursday, March 19, 2015 - link

    "the card is generally overpowered for the relatively low maximum resolutions of DL-DVI "
    So I can drive my 1440p 105Hz display with it and get above 105fps? No? So what kind of statement is that then. DL-DVI may be old, but to say that 1440p is a low maximum resolution, especially with 100Hz+ IPS displays which rely on DL-DVI input, is strange to say the least.
  • H3ld3r - Thursday, March 19, 2015 - link

    Based in what i saw in ryan's review 4k games aren't that much memory demanding. If so how can anyone explain R9 performance?

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