AMD’s Radeon HD 5770 & 5750: DirectX 11 for the Mainstream Crowd
by Ryan Smith on October 13, 2009 12:00 AM EST- Posted in
- GPUs
Batman: Arkham Asylum
Batman: Arkham Asylum is another brand-new PC game, and has been burning up the review charts. It’s an Unreal Engine 3 based game, something that’s not immediately obvious from just looking at it, which is rare for UE3 based games.
As Batman: Arkham Asylum implements anti-aliasing differently between AMD and NVIDIA cards, this is the one title that we do not test AA on, as doing so produces results that can’t be compared.
The 5770 goes back to losing by a wider margin compared to the 4870, roughly 10% this time. The story of it compared to the GTX 260 is also the same, with another GTX 260 win.
Meanwhile the 5750 gets another win over the 4850, although this is one of the only times it loses to the GTS 250.
Finally, a 5850 will buy you another 45%-55% in performance, for $100.
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squeezee - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - link
Remember that there is more to the card than just the ROP/TU/ALUs. If the other logic is intact it could give the dual 5770s a net larger ammount of cache, more resources for scheduling, rasterization, etc.Ryan Smith - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - link
Exactly. Geometry is also a big thing; the 5800 series and 5700 series have the same geometry abilities. Unfortunately this isn't something we can really test in a meaningful manner.Torres9 - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - link
"The 5770 is 108W at load and 18W at idle, meanwhile the 5850 is 86W at load and 16W at idle."do u mean the 5750 or is the 5850 that good?
ET - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - link
I'm again seeing many comments of "DX11 gives me nothing". Well, you buying it gives developers one more reason to develop for it. If you stick to DX10, then it'd take more time to move to DX11. Really. Until the majority of the market moves to a new feature set (and hopefully Windows 7 will help move out of DX9), developers will only use higher end features as "special features".MadMan007 - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - link
1 word for real DX11 rollout: consoles.ET - Thursday, October 15, 2009 - link
You're right, though not the way you think. Xbox programming is more like DX11 than DX9 or DX10, and the Xbox also has a tesselation unit (though simpler than in the DX11 parts), so moving to DX11 would make developers life easier.What users don't get is the difference between API and hardware capabilities. Even if developers limit themselves to DX9 level capabilities, for console compatibility, using DX10 or DX11 only to develop will be much easier than using both DX9 and DX10, and result in faster and less buggy code (optimising for two very different API's is hard).
xipo - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - link
As MadMan007 says, there wont be a large adoption rate from the developers towards DX11 until the NEXT generation of consoles ships (around 2012) supporting DX11... Win7 won't matter because game developers are still going to make games for DX9-DX11... Probably the very few game that will come out being DX11 only are going to be some kind of tech demos & suck 4ss!ET - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - link
I haven't seen it stated, but I'd like to know if the 4850 benchmarked is 512MB or 1GB. If it's 512MB then the comparison with the 5750 isn't valid.poohbear - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - link
u never mentioned that the performance of the 5770 might be a driver issue? the hardware is certainly capable of outdoing the 4870 as we can see in Farcry2, so maybe its just a driver issue?Ryan Smith - Tuesday, October 13, 2009 - link
I don't believe it's a driver issue. If anything it's a Far Cry 2-specific issue, but that's something I'm going to have to do some more digging for.