Subscribe for more console and PC tech analysis: [ Ссылка ]
Read our full article: [ Ссылка ]
Games Tested:
00:00 - The Witcher 3, High, HairWorks Off, Custom AA
01:09 - Assassin's Creed Unity, Very High, FXAA
02:19 - Call of Duty Advanced Warfare, Console Settings, FXAA
02:56 - Far Cry 4, Very High, SMAA
04:03 - Shadow of Mordor, High, High Textures, FXAA
04:44 - Ryse: Son of Rome, Normal, SMAA
05:21 - Crysis 3, High, SMAA T2x
06:52 - Battlefield 4, High, Post-AA
07:49 - Tomb Raider, Ultra, FXAA
Titan X and GTX 980 Ti are built for extreme frame-rate gaming and while 4K is still a bit too much at top settings, you can still get great results with mild settings tweaks. In these benches, we're typically one 'notch' down on quality compared to our 1080p and 1440p benches, in order to keep frame-rates in the playable area (though ACU is still a write-off).
On average, the 980 Ti is 30% faster than the standard 980 when all games here are factored in. However, titles like Crysis 3, Ryse and The Witcher 3 move beyond that threshold. Memory bandwidth is key here to the point that very occasionally, the 980 Ti is seemingly very slightly faster than Titan X. That's not down to the card though - more the bottlenecks elsewhere in the system. Even with our i7 4790K overclocked to 4.6GHz, Titan X and GTX 980 Ti can push your system to the limit when frame-rates are unlocked, particularly on titles that can hit a CPU bottleneck.
Ещё видео!