Far Cry 2

Far Cry 2 is another foliage-heavy game. Thankfully it’s not nearly as punishing as Crysis, and it’s possible to achieve a good framerate even with all the settings at their highest.

Unlike Crysis, we have a few interesting things going on here for the 5870. First, it manages to just beat out the GTX 295. The second is that it manages to lose to its other multi-GPU competitor, the 4870X2. Among its other single-GPU competitors however it’s no contest, with the 5870 beating the GTX 285 by over 40%.

Meanwhile the 5870 CF once again comes out on top of it all. This is going to be a recurring pattern, folks.

Crysis: Warhead Battleforge
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  • Ryan Smith - Wednesday, September 23, 2009 - link

    The load temp is the same as a single card.
  • ilnot1 - Wednesday, September 23, 2009 - link

    Does anyone have a link to any review that compares 4850's, 4870's, and 4890's in Crossfire against the 5870 & 5870 CF setup?
  • T2k - Wednesday, September 23, 2009 - link

    FWIW: http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/AMD/HD_5870_PCI...">http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/AMD/HD_5870_PCI...
  • T2k - Wednesday, September 23, 2009 - link

    Ehh, I meant: http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/ATI/Radeon_HD_5...">http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/ATI/Radeon_HD_5...
  • ilnot1 - Wednesday, September 23, 2009 - link

    Thanks T2k, but the only cards that are in Crossfire in that review are the 58XX's. There are no other comparisons to cards in CF or SLI. Since Ryan included some of the most recent nVida cards in SLI I was hoping to find the 48XX's in CF.
  • T2k - Thursday, September 24, 2009 - link

    Basically the rule of thumb seems to be that at 1920x1200 a single 5870 is still slightly slower than 4870X2 and probably slightly faster than a 4850X2 2GB.
    I own the latter so I will wait this time - either they lower the initial price of the 5870X2 or they release a 5850X2, otherwise I'll pass because single 5870 is simply OVERPRICED as it is already.

  • T2k - Wednesday, September 23, 2009 - link

    Seriously: we get a very nice technical background section - then you top it with this more than idiotic collection of games for testing, leaving out 4850X2 2GB, 5850, using TWO stupid CryEngine-based PoS from Crytek, the most un-optimized code producers or WoW, of which even you admit it's CPU-bounded but now CoD:WaW, no Clear Sky, no UT3 or rather a single current Unreal Eninge-based game?

    Benchmarking part is ALMOST WORTHLESS, the only useful info is that unless you go above 1920x1200 the 4870X2 pretty much owns 5870's @ss as of now.
  • Ryan Smith - Wednesday, September 23, 2009 - link

    For what it's worth, Batman: Arkham Asylum is UE3 engine based.
  • T2k - Wednesday, September 23, 2009 - link

    OK, I missed that (probably because I found the game shots ugly and became uninterested.)
    But how about ET:QW? Yes, it's not the best looking game but it is still popular, let alone World at War which is both great looking and crazy popular, let alone Clear Sky which is a very demanding DX10.1 game? Where is Fallout 3? Where is Modern Warfare?
    FFS the most demanding are the quick ation-shooters and we, FPS players are the first one to upgrade to new cards...
  • Werelds - Thursday, September 24, 2009 - link

    How would ET:QW be a good benchmark? Last I checked, it's still limited to the 30 FPS animations, which makes running it at more than 30 FPS pointless because everything will look jerky.

    I agree something like the CoD games should be included for comparison's sake, but they're hardly a good benchmark or taxing on a system. QW does not fall into the same category though, it has a smaller active playerbase than even L4D which lost a lot of players due to the lack of updates.

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