GeForce GTX 295 Performance: Previewed
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Benchmark Results: Call of Duty: World At War
Again, the GeForce GTX 295 establishes a solid lead, which is most apparent at 2560x1600 with the AA and AF turned on. If these are indeed representative of final-shipping performance figures (and the $499 price tag stays true), Nvidia will have a significant advantage over AMD in this addictive first-person WWII shooter.
More so here than in Crysis, the GTX 280 is also quite a bit faster than the Radeon HD 4870 512 MB. Yes, the 1 GB version would likely show some improvement here, though it’d cost an extra $40, too.
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Current page: Benchmark Results: Call of Duty: World At War
Prev Page Benchmark Results: Crysis Next Page Benchmark Results: Dead SpaceChris Angelini is an Editor Emeritus at Tom's Hardware US. He edits hardware reviews and covers high-profile CPU and GPU launches.
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186 Comments
Comment from the forums
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Tindytim First!?Reply
Why do I get the feeling AMD is already working on something to bust Nvidia again? -
NarwhaleAu Your conclusion was, at best, poor.Reply
Nvidia's "fastest single card" is two 280s on a single PCB, selling at the price point that ATI is selling their 4870x2 at right now?
It is a lot cheaper to produce the 4870 GPU, so I am sure you will see ATI cut their price down by at least $50, and maybe $100. Nvidia will then have the same problem - a monolithic GPU that is expensive to produce and not really any faster than the 4870.
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xsane I totally agree with him on the Physx and CUDA comment. It would be really nice to have a game like Tiger Woods support Physx.Reply
I have 2 x 4850 in crossfire, it kicks ass. -
trainreks good to see that nvidia whipped back into submission. Their prices were ridiculous when they were on the top for a long time.Reply -
malveaux NarwhaleAU:Reply
You clearly need to re-read this article.
And cutting prices $50? $100? Yea, born yesterday? Not happening.
@Article
Thanks for the preview! I've been looking out for the GTX295 to surface. Two GTX260's should perform right on par with the thing, and I was wondering what the price would turn out to be. You can get GTX260's for $219 from the Egg right now (or $440 for two). If the GTX295 is only a single card at $499 (likely to be 20 less at the Egg), it's right on the same price area as buying two 260's separately. And in that situation, I'd rather have a single card with the same power. As would most folk I wager. So looks like the 295 is gonna be a real winner in the enthusiast market.
Very best, -
JAYDEEJOHN Thanks for being open and honest, and mentioning nVidias mandate. It looks as expected, and is a shame we dont have a larger picture of full performance, since nVidia hamstringed you guys. Good to see some competition at the highendReply -
sparky2010 The problem with ATI is that they release good products but give them incomplete/unoptimized drivers.. to see games where the difference between the 4870 and the X2 is almost nil, but the GTX 295 is doing well in it, well, that's no excuse for ATI.. it's too bad though.. i really hope they could just give us good drivers from the beginning, instead of giving us "performance upgrade packages"..Reply
I hope that their next driver will see more optimization, and then a showdown! CROSSFIRE X vs. QUAD SLI!!!! MUAHAHAHA!
Bets down please?