most read reviews

01/27/2010 Razer Megasoma A Gaming Mouse Mat Review 1743 reads
01/12/2010 Razer Naga - A MMO Mouse Review 1733 reads
Home arrow Reviews arrow AMD ATI Radeon HD 4770 512MB GDDR5 review
AMD ATI Radeon HD 4770 512MB GDDR5 review Print E-mail
(24 votes)
Written by Dimitar Dinchev a.k.a. Veseliq   
Saturday, 20 June 2009
 

Page 11 - Performance: 3DMark Vantage


3DMark has established itself as "benchmark number one" for determining the gaming performance of any given computer. This in great extent is very wrong, because due to its popularity, AMD and NVIDIA optimize the drivers of their videocards way too much in favour of 3DMark, making it inadequate for any relevant determination of of the ingame performance of the card, where it is not that well optimized. A good example for this is the fact that the gaming solutions of both NVIDIA and AMD including two graphical cores (SLI/Crossfire) for example can get increase of around 60-70% in 3DMark, while in most games at times they couldn't get even 30% increase. Of course nowadays most of the developers do optimize themselves their products to use more effectively multiple cores and threads.

3DMark Vantage on the other hand is the last from the series and unlike any other game or benchmark is written exclusively for DirectX 10. For the time being in order to preserve compatibility with older computers, all the games actually use the DirectX 9 framework and have additional layer of DirectX 10 effects. For Vantage you need Windows Vistа (with SP1, adding DirectX 10.1 support and ShaderModel 4.1), but the test is one of the most interesting ones, if not for the fact that it tests the capabilities of newest video chips, then because Futuremark (the company that created it) is soon to release the first game based on the 3DMark Vantage core.

Hera are the results, sorted by GPU performance:


you need to upgrade your flash player


Just points. They have no meaning for us. We hope you have some use of them (:



emag

ecs

advertisments