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Far Cry 2
Far Cry 2 has gathered a lot of interest since it
was announced, and now that the game is out, it only seems natural
that we add it to our benching toolbox. Unlike Crysis and
Warhead, both of which use CryEngine2, Far Cry 2 uses a brand new
engine called "Dunia". To test Far Cry 2, we used the internal
benchmarking software to test the same resolutions and AA settings
as Crysis. First up, we tested all three cards to the "Very
High" preset:

(click for larger version)
The results here are nothing short of astonishing.
Probably the strangest thing is that all three cards performed
nearly identical when 8xAA was applied. The 4870X2 ran away
with the testing at 2x and 4xAA, and the 4850X2 sat in the middle
between the 4870X2 and the GTX-280 at these settings. In
general the 280 bested the 4850X2 at 0xAA and took its hardest hits going from 0xAA to 2xAA.
The dive from 4xAA to 8xAA on the ATi cards is a little disturbing,
and I wonder if the performance will improve in future drivers.
Keep in mind that the 4850X2 was tested with out of the box drivers,
and I would not be surprised if there was a hotfix on launch day.

(click for larger version)
At the Ultra preset, we see a similar picture;
however the 280's performance loss as AA is applied seems less
drastic. The 4850X2 again has the upper hand at 2xAA and 4xAA,
and is in a dead heat at 0xAA and 8xAA. The minimum frame rate
is consistently lower than that of the GTX-280 throughout the test
suite, in fact, both ATi cards seem to have a much wider gap between
minimum and maximum, while the 280 remains much more consistent.
Race Driver: GRID
GRID is the latest racing game from Codemasters, the same company
that has brought us titles such as Colin McRae, Operation
Flashpoint, and TOCA. If you haven't had the opportunity to
play GRID, I highly recommend you give the game a shot. It
reminds me very much of one of my all-time favorite racing games:
Need for Speed: Porsche Unleashed.
For testing in GRID, I tested at 1920x1200 with all settings maxed
out, using 8xAA. I used the San Francisco circuit, with the
Ravenwest Viper in the Pro Muscle category. Frame rate was
captured by FRAPS, reporting Minimum, Maximum and Average frame rates.
Most sites report Average frame rates only, which is a bit of a
disservice, as I think Minimum frame rate is a bigger factor into
whether or not game play is adversely affected, especially if Average
frame rates exceed 60FPS.

As you can see, the 4850X2 just tears GRID up,
with a minimum frame rate of 70FPS, a max of 127FPS, averaging out at
95FPS. Not shabby at all.
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