Our 2015 GPU Benchmark Suite

Also kicking off alongside GTX Titan X today will be the first article to use our new 2015 GPU benchmark suite.

For 2015 we have upgraded or replaced most of our games, retiring several long-time titles including Bioshock: Infinite, Metro, and our last DirectX 10 game, Crysis Warhead. Our returning titles are Battlefield 4 and Crysis 3, the former of which is still a popular MP title to this day, and the latter continuing to pulverize GPUs well before we hit its highest settings.

Joining these 2 games are 7 new titles. Middle Earth: Shadow of Mordor and Far Cry 4 are our new action/shooter games, while Dragon Age: Inquisition rides the line between an action game and an RPG. Meanwhile for strategy games we have Civilization: Beyond Earth and Total War: Attila, these two games representing the latest entries in their respective series. Rounding out our collection is GRID Autosport, the latest GRID game from Codemasters, and the unique first person puzzle/exploration game The Talos Principle from Croteam.

AnandTech GPU Bench 2015 Game List
Game Genre API(s)
Battlefield 4 FPS DX11 + Mantle
Crysis 3 FPS DX11
Shadow of Mordor Action/Open World DX11
Civilization: Beyond Earth Strategy DX11 + Mantle
Dragon Age: Inquisition RPG DX11 + Mantle
The Talos Principle First Person Puzzle DX11
Far Cry 4 FPS DX11
Total War: Attila Strategy DX11
GRID Autosport Racing DX11

With new low-level APIs ramping up in 2015, we’re going to be paying particular attention to APIs starting this year, as everyone is interested in seeing what Vulkan (née Mantle) and DirectX 12 can do. Unless otherwise noted, going forward all benchmarks will be using low-level APIs when available, meaning DX12/Vulkan/Mantle when possible.

Meanwhile from a design standpoint our benchmark settings remain unchanged. For lower-end cards we’ll look at 1080p at various quality settings when practical, and for high-end cards we’ll be looking at 1080p and above at the highest quality settings. The one exception to this is 4K, which at 2.25x the resolution of 1440p remains difficult to hit playable framerates, in which case we’ll also include a lower quality setting to showcase what kind of quality hit it takes to make 4K playable on current video cards.

The Test

As for our hardware testbed, it remains unchanged from 2014, being composed of an overclocked Core i7-4960X hosed in an NZXT Phantom 630 Windowed Edition case.

CPU: Intel Core i7-4960X @ 4.2GHz
Motherboard: ASRock Fatal1ty X79 Professional
Power Supply: Corsair AX1200i
Hard Disk: Samsung SSD 840 EVO (750GB)
Memory: G.Skill RipjawZ DDR3-1866 4 x 8GB (9-10-9-26)
Case: NZXT Phantom 630 Windowed Edition
Monitor: Asus PQ321
Video Cards: AMD Radeon R9 295X2
AMD Radeon R9 290X
AMD Radeon HD 7990
NVIDIA GeForce GTX Titan X
NVIDIA GeForce GTX Titan
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 980
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 780 Ti
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 690
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 580
Video Drivers: NVIDIA Release 347.84 Beta
AMD Catalyst Cat 15.3 Beta
OS: Windows 8.1 Pro
Meet The GeForce GTX Titan X Battlefield 4
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  • cmoney408 - Tuesday, March 24, 2015 - link

    can you please post the settings you used for the 295x2? not the in game settings, but what you used in catalyst.
  • FlushedBubblyJock - Thursday, April 2, 2015 - link

    " and the Radeon R9 295X2, the latter of which is down to ~$699 these days and "

    I knew it wouldn't be $699 when i clicked the link...

    its frikkin $838 , $ 1,176 $990, $978 ...

    Yep, that's the real amd card price, not the fantasy one.
  • gianluca - Sunday, April 5, 2015 - link

    Hi!
    Just a question: Do you suggest me to buy r9 295x2?
    Thx
  • Kyururin - Wednesday, April 8, 2015 - link

    Umm I find it pointless to compare AMD R9 290x with GTX 980, R9 290x is build to be competitive to Nvidia's stock 780 not 780ti and sure as hell not GTX 980, it's dumb, it's like trying to ask a grandma(R9 290x) to compete with supermodel(GTX 980) in a beauty pageant, of course Nvidia is going to win, but it's not like the winning gap is spectacular or something to be astonished about. Last but not least GTX 980's lead over the grandma is the largest sub 2k, let's not forget that both the GTX 980 and the grandma are build to handle 4k so given the time Nvidia has to prepare the GTX980, it should had obliterated the grandma in 4k but the performance gap is not that fricking big and deserved to be woved, especially FarCry 4. Fanboys always bash AMD for their terrible drivers but it's not like they are ignored you dumb witt, they are slowly improving their drivers. Did AMD ever said We are going to pretend that our driver don't suck and so we are not going to fix it.
  • alexreffand - Monday, May 18, 2015 - link

    Why is the GTX 580 in the tests? Why not the Titan Z or even the 970?
  • ajboysen - Monday, July 25, 2016 - link

    I'm not sure if the specs have changed since this post but they list the boost clock speed as 1531 MHz, Not 1002

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