Are you dutiful about keeping your drivers up-to-date? Nvidia does a pretty good job of maintaining a regular release schedule. Today we look at how much performance you can expect from an old card in new games using four driver packages.
Benchmark Results: F1 2010 (DX11)
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Header Cell - Column 0
1680x1050No AA
1680x10508x AA
1920x1080No AA
1920x10808x AA
2560x1600No AA
2560x16008x AA
Percent Gainfrom 197.41 to 266.58
31.82%
36.41%
40.09%
35.89%
32.32%
27.40%
F1 2010 was only released prior to 260.89. From 260.89 to 266.58, there is about a 10% bump in performance at every level. There isn't a single case in which we see drivers behaving strangely or delivering worse performance than the previous version. Given that this was an AMD-sponsored title, it seems pretty clear that once Nvidia got its hands on it, the driver team was able to make some impressive headway into speeding up performance.
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Impressive results to say the least... well, except for WOW. That has to be a bit of a disappointment for the people who care about that title. But otherwise quite remarkable performance optimizations from the driver team.
I have to agree with the conclusion, due to the recent nature of the Fermi architecture it probably took both Nvidia and developers time to get used to the new hardware. It just wasn't well optimized upon launch. Although I think it's worth noting that it still managed to perform well even on those early drivers.