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The GeForce 358.50 Performance Analysis featuring Ashes of the Singularity - Printable Version +- Forums (https://www.babeltechreviews.com/community) +-- Forum: BabelTechReviews (https://www.babeltechreviews.com/community/forumdisplay.php?fid=3) +--- Forum: Everything BabelTech Related (https://www.babeltechreviews.com/community/forumdisplay.php?fid=14) +--- Thread: The GeForce 358.50 Performance Analysis featuring Ashes of the Singularity (/showthread.php?tid=422) |
The GeForce 358.50 Performance Analysis featuring Ashes of the Singularity - BabelTech - 11-03-2015 CLICK HERE TO SEE THIS POST ON THE MAIN SITE As regularly featured by BabelTechReviews, this performance analysis charts the performance of 27 games using the latest GeForce WHQL 358.50 driver that was released primarily for the Star Wars: Battlefront Open Beta on October 7. We are comparing WHQL 358.50 versus the Geforce WHQL 355.98 driver that was released at the end of September for Killing Floor 2. However, we are going to focus on our latest benchmark, Ashes of the Singularity, which is the first publicly released DX12 benchmark, so far. We are introducing something new at BTR. The Big Picture, once reserved for video card reviews, will be included in every driver performance analysis beginning with this one. We are comparing the GTX 980 Ti versus the Fury X, the GTX 980 versus the R9 390X OC, the GTX 970 OC versus the R9 290X, and for added information, recent 290X CrossFire and GTX 980 SLI results. The Fury X is benchmarked on the latest Catalyst 15.9.1 betas, and the GTX 980 Ti/SLI and GTX 980 are on the very latest Nvidia GeForce 358.50 drivers.
This driver performance analysis features Nvidia's top Maxwell gaming GeForce card, the GTX 980 Ti, and we also benchmark GTX 980 Ti SLI. We have just now added the GTX 980 to our driver analysis results and we also add the GTX 970 EXOC and the GTX 960 results for Ashes of the Singularity DX12 benchmark. We are going to give you the performance results of the GTX 980, the GTX 980 Ti, and GTX 980 Ti SLI at 1920x1080, 2560x1440, and at 3840x2160 resolutions. This driver performance evaluation will chart a natural comparison of the performance changes since Nvidia's last WHQL driver set. Our testing platform is Windows 10 Home 64-bit, using an Intel Core i7-4790K at 4.00GHz which turbos to 4.4GHz for all cores, an ASUS Z97E motherboard, and 16GB of Kingston "Beast" HyperX RAM at 2133MHz. The settings and hardware are identical except for the drivers being tested. At GTX 970 and above, we test at higher settings and resolutions generally than we test midrange and lower-end cards. All of our games are now tested at three resolutions: 3840x2160, 2560x1440 and 1920x1080 at 60Hz, and we use DX11 whenever possible with a very strong emphasis on the latest games. For our next GeForce performance analysis, we will add the GTX 970 results.Let’s get right to the test configuration, the driver release notes, and then to the results. Test Configuration & Driver Release NotesTest Configuration - Hardware
Test Configuration - Software
The 26 Game benchmarks & 3 synthetic tests
Ashes of the SingularityAshes of the Singularity is an AMD Evolved title as a Steam Early Access Pre-Beta. It is scheduled to be released next year, but it is an Alpha DX12 game in an unfinished and unoptimized state. It is an RTS much in the style of Commander and it uses DX12 to make it possible for very large numbers of units to interact at one time. ![]() There is only one playable race now, and many promised features are yet to be introduced, but the benchmark - although cranky about changing resolutions - seems to be repeatable and an accurate depiction of what is happening in the game. ![]() ![]() ![]() This may or may not turn out to be a good DX12 benchmark, but in the absence of any other, we will continue to chart its progress until the game is released. Lets look at Nvidia's release highlights regarding the GeForce 358.50 WHQL driver before we head to performance testing. Release Notes Highlights for GeForce 358.50This is a short list highlighting the fact that Nvidia's WHQL driver release schedule is tied to the release of AAA games. We have played Killing Floor 2 and the gory PhysX visuals are quite impressive. However, it is a very difficult game for us to consistently benchmark. This new GeForce Game Ready driver ensures you'll have the best possible gaming experience in the Star Wars: Battlefront Open Beta. This driver also brings support for the latest OpenGL ARB extensions as well as OpenGL ES 3.2. In addition, this Game Ready driver also includes updated features and functionality for the GameWorks VR software development kit (SDK).For the comprehensive release notes, you will need to download the .pdf Let's head to the chart and compare the driver progress with the GTX 980 Ti and with the GTX 980 Ti SLI since we tested the last time. Benchmarks & Performance AnalysisHere are our results of 27 games and 3 synthetics compared between GeForce 358.50 WHQL drivers, and GeForce 355.98 WHQL drivers using GTX 980 Ti and GTX 980 Ti SLI. Each set of WHQL drivers are compared against the other in the adjoining results column and the higher performance number is in bold. If there is a tie, both results are given in bold type. ![]() As usual, we note mostly small improvements with Nvidia's new GeForce 358.50 over the older 355.98 drivers, including a few standouts in some games. We generally see improvements and again, a possible rebalancing of GTX 980 Ti SLI. The Big Picture once reserved for video card reviews has been expanded to feature all of our competing cards on recent drivers. We are beginning with the GTX 980 Ti versus the Fury X, the GTX 980 versus the R9 390X OC, the GTX 970 OC versus the R9 290X, and for added information, 290X CrossFire and GTX 980 SLI results. The Fury X is on the latest Catalyst 15.9.1 betas and the GTX 980 Ti/SLI and GTX 980 are on the very latest Nvidia 358.50 drivers. The 290X/CF and 390X are on Catalyst 15.8 and the GTX 970 XOC is on GeForce 355.82 as shown on the top and last lines of the chart. The Big Picture![]() Conclusion:We would recommend upgrading to the latest GeForce 358.50 driver because there are generally incremental advantages, and no large performance-impacting negatives that we have encountered. It is Nvidia's latest WHQL driver for Windows 10, and we will be using it this week to analyze performance of AMD's latest Catalyst driver. ![]() Stay tuned, next up we are benching for an upcoming driver performance evaluation of AMD's newest Catalyst 15.9.1 Windows 10 driver. In the meantime, join BTR's Community for great tech discussions and also feel free to comment on this Performance Analysis in the comments section below. Happy gaming! RE: The GeForce 358.50 Performance Analysis featuring Ashes of the Singularity - apoppin - 11-03-2015 I hope you like this one. It has something new for driver analysis articles beginning now - --The Big Picture This way, you no longer have to wait for VC reviews to compare Nvidia against its AMD counterparts with very recent drivers. And of course, I'll expand it to include more cards ![]() RE: The GeForce 358.50 Performance Analysis featuring Ashes of the Singularity - SickBeast - 11-04-2015 Great job! Hey have you looked into the search engine optimization yet? Hopefully these articles get liked to quite a bit. RE: The GeForce 358.50 Performance Analysis featuring Ashes of the Singularity - apoppin - 11-04-2015 Thank-you? Do you like the Big Picture? I think it will add a lot of information that gamers had to wait for a video card review to see. No. Not yet. I have not felt well for 3 weeks. Once I feel better, I will work on all the things that I have let go of for now. ![]() RE: The GeForce 358.50 Performance Analysis featuring Ashes of the Singularity - SickBeast - 11-05-2015 I do really like the big picture. I think a good improvement would be to come up with overall average scores. The big picture chart was hard to read on my tablet. RE: The GeForce 358.50 Performance Analysis featuring Ashes of the Singularity - apoppin - 11-06-2015 I checked the big picture and it looked fine on Shield as long as it was opened in its own window. I don't believe in average scores. They are meaningless when used as an overall as they only represent the benching suite used. If I used different games, the percentage would change with the games. I think each game the reader is interested in should be looked at individually. RE: The GeForce 358.50 Performance Analysis featuring Ashes of the Singularity - SickBeast - 11-06-2015 You're right actually, it looks great once you open it up in a new window. RE: The GeForce 358.50 Performance Analysis featuring Ashes of the Singularity - apoppin - 11-20-2015 Until Ashes of the Singularity is released at least in beta form, it is a PoS benchmark. It has updated its 2.5GB install with 3 patches over the past week that broke everything for both AMD and Nvidia. I'll keep following and benching it, but I will put AotS down as completely unreliable in my notes and on the charts. It's a waste of time until the game is stable and Nvidia and AMD can really write drivers for it. I'd suggest you ignore the results the Advocates post until the game is released (at least in a stable beta form). What a rip-off for $40. :@ RE: The GeForce 358.50 Performance Analysis featuring Ashes of the Singularity - SickBeast - 11-21-2015 How come in that game your SLI benchmarks are always the same or slower than the single card scores? Is SLI broken in that game? I thought you could run an AMD card and an nVidia card together in that game for some kind of crazy mixed franken SLI-fire. RE: The GeForce 358.50 Performance Analysis featuring Ashes of the Singularity - apoppin - 11-21-2015 No. SLI and CrossFire do not work. The game is an **Alpha** benchmark and the results will change every time they push out a new patch. And I seriously doubt that SLI/CF will *ever* work together satisfactorily |