Total War: Attila

The second strategy game in our benchmark suite, Total War: Attila is the latest game in the Total War franchise. Total War games have traditionally been a mix of CPU and GPU bottlenecks, so it takes a good system on both ends of the equation to do well here. In this case the game comes with a built-in benchmark that plays out over a large area with a fortress in the middle, making it a good GPU stress test.

Total War: Attila - 3840x2160 - Max Quality + Perf Shadows

Total War: Attila - 3840x2160 - Quality + Perf Shadows

Total War: Attila - 2560x1440 - Max Quality + Perf Shadows

In creating Attila, the developers at Creative Assembly sought to push the limit of current generation video cards, and this is no more evident than at 4K Max Quality. At 23.5fps even the GTX Titan X is foiled here, never mind the GTX 980 and GK110 cards. To get single card performance above 30fps we have to drop a notch to the “Quality” setting, which gets the GTX Titan X up to 44.9fps. In any case, at these settings the GTX Titan X makes easy work of the single-GPU competition, beating everything else by 30-66%.

Alternatively we can drop from 4K to 1440p and still run Max Quality, in which case the GTX Titan X delivers a very similar 47.1fps.

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  • Urizane - Monday, March 23, 2015 - link

    660 and 660 Ti are different chips entirely, with 660 Ti not fully enabled.
  • chizow - Tuesday, March 17, 2015 - link

    @stun you're in for a huge upgrade either way. Makes sense to wait though, but I am not sure if 390X will change current pricing if at all. But Nvidia may also launch a cut down GM200 in that timeframe to give you another option in that $500+ range.
  • Da W - Tuesday, March 17, 2015 - link

    Usually, the last one out is the fastest.
  • furthur - Wednesday, March 18, 2015 - link

    you're an absolute idiot if you jump on this crap. grab a 290 in the mean time and a 390x on release,
  • Michael Bay - Wednesday, March 18, 2015 - link

    Maybe he doesn`t need an equivalent of a room heater in his case like you do, brah.
  • Phartindust - Wednesday, March 18, 2015 - link

    At 83c, you're not exactly making ice cubes with titan.
  • cactusdog - Wednesday, March 18, 2015 - link

    Im not convinced about this TitanX and the last titan turned out to be a bad investment for the $1,000 asking price. Last time, Titan came out (at $1,000) then a matter of weeks later , the 780TI came out with the same performance for $300 less. This time, we have the 390X soon but no doubt Nvidia have a 980TI up their sleeve, so the value of these highend $1,000 cards disappears quickly making it a bad investment. I expect a $1,000 card to hold the performance crown for at least 6-12 months not a few weeks, then get out performed by a card that costs $300 less.
  • Laststop311 - Wednesday, March 18, 2015 - link

    it wasn't weeks later it was many months later
  • D. Lister - Wednesday, March 18, 2015 - link

    @cactusdog
    "Titan came out (at $1,000) then a matter of weeks later , the 780TI came out with the same performance for $300 less."
    Actually the 780Ti, having a lot more CUDA cores, destroys the original Titan in gaming performance. The 780Ti equivalent was the "Titan Black", with the same amount of cores, but twice the VRAM, slightly higher default core clock, and fully unlocked compute.
  • Phartindust - Wednesday, March 18, 2015 - link

    ^This

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