Final Words

The additional tests that we've run help to solidify our assessment of ATI's situation with the X1000 line. Our tests show that the high end ATI cards handle enabling antialiasing better than NVIDIA cards overall. The X1600 XT fairly consistently performs much worse than the 6800 GT and a little better than the 6600 GT. The X1300 Pro doesn't perform nearly as well as the 6600 GT in our tests (though it costs nearly the same), doesn't perform at playable framerates over 1024x768 in high quality modes, and enabling antialiasing is simply not an option.

The X1800 XT will be good competition for the 7800 GTX, besting it in many cases when antialiasing is enabled at higher resolutions. The X1800 XL competes fairly well with the 7800 GT, but the NVIDIA card generally comes out on top in the tests that we ran. OpenGL games are still a hurdle for all the ATI cards to overcome, but it seems as if the X1600 XT is more highly capable of mitigating the impact of a non-Microsoft API on performance.

The true bottom line of the goodness of these cards with respect to their NVIDIA counterparts is price. The MSRP data that we have (which is all we have to go on so far) is absolutely a deal breaker. At every step along the way, the NVIDIA parts that perform at or near the level of the ATI X1000 series cards look like they will have a $50 to $100 price advantage. As the NVIDIA parts have had the market to themselves for a while, their prices have managed to settle. ATI won't be able to benefit from the high prices that we usually see at a product launch because their parts just aren't worth the price premium.

But that's not all the coverage that we have planned for the new ATI parts. Stay tuned for some more in-depth Shader Model 3.0, image quality, and market analysis soon.

Splinter Cell: Chaos Theory Performance
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  • bob661 - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    Are they fully DX10 or partially? If partially, will that be enough to be Vista compliant?
  • Clauzii - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    I´m pretty amased that ATI despite the higher clockrate can acomplish almost the same as a 7800GTX although with 2/3 the Pipelinecapacity.

    I´ll look even more forward to R580.
  • MemberSince97 - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    Ahh Thank You Derek, this is much more AT style.
  • Madellga - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    Derek, nice update. Thanks for including 1920x1200 in the benchmarks, it is a good move and I hope that other sites follow AT on that.

    It is interesting to see how the performance of some higher level cards fall after 1600x1200. Anyone buying WS monitors should pay attention to this.

    I was not conviced that the X1800XT was better performer than the 7800GTX, but looking at the WS high resolutions and AA+AF that pretty much settles the discussion.

    Don't let the critics bug you. Use it as feedback and source of ideas for future reviews.

    On the next article, please do not forget to check the famous "shimmering" effect.
    Does the R520 family handles this issue better than the G70?

    Take care
  • JNo - Monday, October 10, 2005 - link

    Well put! This is extremely helpful for 1920x1200 LCD owners
  • erinlegault - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    I think important point that is missing from all reviews is the importance of a Vista compatible graphics crad. The x1xxx's are the first graphics cards compatible with the new spec.

    So the price premium may be worth while if you are interested in upgrading the Vista, when ever it is finally released.
  • bob661 - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    All you need is DX9 to be Vista compatible.
  • bob661 - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    Oops, DX8.
  • tfranzese - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    From the article:
    quote:

    But performance is absolutely critical on current and near term games.


    Yet you guys tested none. I think benchmarking available versions of FEAR, Call of Duty 2, Serious Sam 2, Black and White 2, etc would be much more enteresting than some of the choices made here. All the cards tested handle todays games well, but I would expect most who buy these cards are buying these for games that are soon-to-be released or coming in the next one or two quarters.
  • karlreading - Friday, October 7, 2005 - link

    i must admit it seems to me everyones just giving anadtech a hard time. the review seemed prtty reasonable, they responded to the massive backlash they got from there first review, and i think thats where the deserve the credit. sheesh guys! givem a break!
    karlos

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