Splinter Cell: Chaos Theory Performance

Splinter Cell: Chaos Theory is a beautiful stealth action game that makes excellent use of light and shadow. Their extended SM3.0 features are beautiful, but we tested without SM3.0 enabled for consistency. These numbers are based on the lighthouse demo that comes with the games, and we used the benchmark scripts created by Reverend of Beyond3d.

This is one of the few games that shows the X1800 XT with a clear lead over the 7800 GTX with no AA enabled. The 7800 GT still bests the X1800 XL, and the X1600 again performs on par with a much cheaper part in the 6600 GT.



Turning on AA serves to increase the X1800 XT performance advantage considerably. The future high end part from ATI will allow Splinter Cell 3 to run at 2048x1536 with 4xAA and 8xAF at a playable frame rate. The X1800XL competes directly with the 7800 GTX in this benchmark with the 7800 GT lagging behind. In this way, Splinter Cell shows us something almost the reverse of Doom 3 and Chronicles of Riddick performance.

While the X1600 XT does post better numbers than the 6600 GT, we will be more interested in how the cheaper X1600 parts will hold up against the very popular NVIDIA mid-range part.



Once again, we see the X1800 XT handle the impact of antialiasing better than all the other parts. The X1800 XL also adapts better than the NVIDIA cards. While the 6800 GT keeps up with the X1600 XT in terms of AA impact, the 6600 GT doesn't do quite as well.



The Chronicles of Riddick Performance Final Words
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  • nserra - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    I agree.

    When doing some article the site must say if they are doing a preview, review or overview.
  • Questar - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    "High quality anisotropic filtering is definitely something that we have begged of NVIDIA and ATI for a long time and we are glad to see it, but the benefits just aren't that visible in first-person shooters and the like."

    So you like all the texture shimmering on a 7800?!?
  • DerekWilson - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    We will absolutely be looking further in depth on the shimmering issue.

    But texture shimmering and the impact of ATI's new High Quality AF option aren't the same problem. Certainly angle independant AF will help games where both ATI and NV have shimmering issues, but those instances occur less often and in things like space and flight games.

    I don't like shimmering, and I do like the option for High Quality AF. But I simply wanted to say that the option for High Quality AF is not worth the price difference.
  • PrinceGaz - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    We're not talking about ATI's new angle-independent HQ AF option. It's nVidia's over-agressive trilinear-filtering optimisations that all 7800 series cards are doing, almost to the point of it being bilinear-filtering. They did that a couple of years ago and are doing it again now, but only on the 7800 series cards (6800 and under get normal filtering).

    If you want an example of this, just look at the transitions between mipmaps on the 7800 in the first review of the new ATI cards. I'm not talking about spikes on certain angles, but how the 7800 almost immediately jumps from one mipmap to the next, whereas ATI blends the transition far better. In fact, that is the main thing that struck me about those AF patterns in the review.

    Over-agressive trilinear-optimisation is a problem even on 6800 series cards after supposedly disabling it in the drivers (it reduces the impact of it). I just wish it could be turned off entirely as some games need full true trilinear filtering to avoid shimmering.
  • DerekWilson - Saturday, October 8, 2005 - link

    I know what you are talking about.

    The issue is that *I* was talking about the new HQ AF option in ATI hardware in the sentence Questar quoted in the original post in this thread.

    He either thought I was talking about good AF in general or that the HQ AF has something to do with why ATI doesn't have a texture shimmering problem.

    I just wanted to clear that up.

    Also, the real problem with NVIDIA hardware is the combination of trilinear and anisotropic optmizations along side the "rose" style angle dependant AF. Their "brilinear" method of waiting until near the mipmap transition to blend textures is a perfectly fine solution if just using trilinear filtering (the only point of which is to blurr the transition lines between mipmaps anyway).
  • TheInvincibleMustard - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    Hard|OCP did some image quality comparisons between the 7800GT and the X1800XL in their "X1000" launch article, and there was a noticable difference between ATi's HQAF and nVidia's AF, and in a FPS no less. Add in the fact that they pretty much said that you could enable HQAF for hardly any performance drop, and that's a pretty nice point in ATi's favor.

    I think that AnandTech should look at an IQ comparison again, if they're not seeing any difference.

    -TIM
  • nserra - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    I agree. New image quality tests must be done.

    Or maybe nvidia cards with 2 x performance of Ati, but with xgi/sis image quality is OK.
    I don’t think so.

    S3 and XGI have been plagued by their texture quality (image quality). But no one cares if those problems come from an Nvidia card.

    X8xx was supposed to offer lower image quality than R3xx, but no one really has showed that.
  • bob661 - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    I've never experienced image quality issues on NVidia or ATI cards. They both look the same to me. YMMV.
  • ChrisSwede - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    I was wondering what card available now that compares to my 9800 PRO? i.e. which card should I look for in reviews and equate to mine?

    ?Maybe none? :)

    Thanks
  • ChrisSwede - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    Thanks

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