The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Performance Scaling


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Going a different way than the Crysis test, the 4870 X2 system perform better at lower resolutions than at 2560x1600 compared to the competition. The 4-way CrossFire solution did lead the pack at 2560x1600, but it was fairly bottlenecked at lower resolutions.

These numbers are all very high and playable, and we didn't notice any stuttering issues this time around. Of course, this is a subjective test and we haven't yet taken a quantitative look at it, but our subjective test didn't give us any cause for concern.

We do see NVIDIA hardware with a bit of an advantage, but it still seems like the GTX 280 is ever so slightly over priced giving between a 20% and 40% advantage over the 4870 for a roughly 50% increase in price. As the GTX 260 out performs the 4870 yet costs the same, the value here is even clearer.

Crysis Performance Scaling Enemy Territory: Quake Wars Performance Scaling
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  • CyberHawk - Tuesday, August 12, 2008 - link

    That kind of message was I hoping for to get from review... a kind of didn't happen.
  • BRDiger - Tuesday, August 12, 2008 - link

    I just wondered if you useed the 8.8 Catalysts... The testing rigs specs would be nice for comparison of the benchies...
  • nubie - Wednesday, August 13, 2008 - link

    This is interesting, and thanks for the hints about a 1GB model, but guru3d ran an article two weeks ago on a 2GB 4850, so I believe that is trumped.

    I too was hoping for more enthusiasm, the 9800GTX is $200 and the just released GTX 260 is under $300?? Stop the presses nVidia is no longer on top!!

    AMD has wrested back the performance crown with a vengeance, and their mainstream products are totally playable in recent games.

    Meanwhile nVidia is trying to plug every price point with the 8800GS and 9600GSO and the 9600GT, not to mention the 9800GTX+, this is freaking ridiculous.

    You need to paint a more realistic picture, this is one of the rare times that mainstream games can be played for $170 while decimating the competition's products that cost $250, and the high end is owned by the same company with a working Dual chip card with the performance crown, and being a more efficient electricity user than the competition.

    If nVidia comes out with a GTX 260 x2 or a GTX 280 x2 I am going to look very carefully to see how glowing THAT review is.

    I want SLi and Crossfire to die. There is no reason to only allow 2 displays (or worse just one) on a multi-output machine. Worse still a machine with 2x PCI-E 16x slots (even in dual 8x mode) should be allowed to run any hardware that fits in them.

    This software hampering of a completely standard PCI-E interface is stupid and childish, they should just drop it.

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