What about Recent Games?

We do have one major concern with AMD’s Dynamic Switchable Graphics that we haven’t really addressed so far: drivers. Why are drivers a problem? Just like AMD’s non-dynamic switchable graphics, you’re stuck waiting for your laptop OEM to release new drivers, as AMD’s mobile reference drivers are only for discrete GPUs (and even then, not all OEMs participate, Sony and Toshiba being two prime examples). The drivers for switchable graphics consist of a proxy driver that intercepts calls and determines which GPU should receive the request, Intel’s IGP driver, and AMD’s GPU driver. AMD informed us that they make a new driver build available on a monthly basis for switchable graphics, but it’s up to the laptop vendors to test and validate the driver (and add in their hooks for keyboard shortcuts like LCD brightness and such) and make it available to the public. Generally speaking, this happens when a laptop is first launched, and if you’re lucky, you might get one or two more driver updates before the OEM stops worrying about an older model laptop.

So how big of a concern is this really? Our selection of gaming benchmarks consists of games that are all six months to more than a year old, so any moderately recent driver should work properly on our test suite. As we’ve already noted, there was a periodic stability issue in DiRT 2 (not consistently reproducible and perhaps related more to the game than AMD’s drivers), and there was a major rendering issue in StarCraft II at medium detail settings or higher. With our current gaming suite experiencing problems, we wanted to look at some newer titles to see if the drivers might have additional issues.

We selected six games that have all come out in the past six months. In alphabetical order, the games are Deus Ex: Human Revolution, DiRT 3, Duke Nukem Forever, Portal 2, Super Street Fighter IV: Arcade Edition, and The Witcher 2—and we’re also tossing in results from Enemy Territory: Quake Wars just for fun (an OpenGL game). Some of these games will become part of our new benchmark suite in a couple months (after Battlefield 3, Rage, and Skyrim launch) while others are recent releases that ought to be moderately demanding. We did run performance tests on all of these games, along with testing for compatibility with the Sony and Acer laptops. First, let’s look at performance, using Medium settings.

Deus Ex: Human Revolution

DiRT 3

Duke Nukem Forever

Enemy Territory: Quake Wars

Portal 2

Super Street Fighter IV: Arcade Edition

The Witcher 2

Average Recent Game Performance

So here’s where things get interesting. In our current (soon to be deprecated) list of games on the previous page, the 6630M in the VAIO C generally equals the GT 540M in the Acer 3830TG. NVIDIA wins in Bad Company 2, Left 4 Dead 2, Mafia II, Mass Effect 2, and STALKER: Call of Pripyat by 4-14%; AMD counters by claiming wins in Civilization V (3%), DiRT 2 (1%), Metro 2033 (6%), StarCraft II (31%), and Total War: Shogun 2 (6%). Obviously, StarCraft II is the big difference, and it looks like the CPU throttling (or using ThrottleStop to set the CPU speed to 2.1GHz) accounts for a large portion of the difference. As we mentioned on the previous page, the Alienware M11x R3 averages out to 3.5% faster than the best the Acer can muster, and the Dell XPS 15 comes in 9% faster than the 3830TG, so if the CPU throttling weren’t present we’d expect the 3830TG to end up around 6% faster than the VAIO CA. Be that as it may, let’s just call it a tie between the GT 540M and HD 6630M and move on to our newer titles.

Looking at the recent releases (along with the OpenGL Enemy Territory: Quake Wars), the tables shift dramatically. The closest the VAIO C/HD 6630M gets is in The Witcher 2, where the Acer 3830TG/GT 540M still has an 8% lead. Elsewhere, NVIDIA leads by over 50% in Deus Ex: Human Revolution, Duke Nukem Forever, and Super Street Fighter IV: Arcade Edition. Rounding things out, DiRT 3 is 28% faster, ETQW is a 20% lead, and Portal 2 is 15% faster. Also worth pointing out is that three of the games in this list (DiRT 3, Deus Ex, and Portal 2) are promoted by AMD (and SSF4 is promoted by NVIDIA). Overall, in our recent titles the Acer leads the Sony by a not-insignificant 35% on average—and that’s with an Optimus laptop that we’re either running at a slower CPU speed, or potentially getting some CPU throttling. How much of the performance loss is caused by unoptimized drivers is unclear, but we suspect the 6630M with Catalyst 11.8 would fare a lot better.

Medium Detail Gaming Comparison Gaming Compatibility Results
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  • powchie - Tuesday, September 20, 2011 - link

    No battery life comparison?
  • DanNeely - Tuesday, September 20, 2011 - link

    This is just a GPU switching comparison, not a pair of full laptop reviews.
  • khimera2000 - Tuesday, September 20, 2011 - link

    Its an Intel GPU switching comparison. They didnt compare AMD switching with AMD CPU. I think thats an important detail.

    This articles scope is alot more narrow then the title implies.
  • JarredWalton - Tuesday, September 20, 2011 - link

    This article is over 8000 words and I thought that was long enough. Battery life numbers are posted above if you're interested. Really, the battery life comparison is more of a look at how well Acer and Sony are optimizing their BIOS and drivers for mobile use, and both do quite well (though Sony leads in terms of efficiency, even with a larger LCD).
  • Stuka87 - Tuesday, September 20, 2011 - link

    I have not yet used AMD's switchable setup. Being that its so new, I am not surprised that it is not yet perfect. nVidia took a while to work out their kinks as well.

    Although with that said, I still have an issue with my Precision (Optimus with i7-2620M and Quadro 1000). I use a Matrox Triple Head to go to drive three displays with a Dell Docking Station. This being when I am undocked running off battery, it runs on the Intel graphics. When I dock, I tries to switch to the Quadro. However, I end up with a black screen because its trying to use the resolution of the built in screen that Intel was driving before docking. The work around is to always hibernate before docking, this makes it re-initialize the hardware when it comes out of hibernation.

    But typically, the switch works fine. And I get amazing battery life out of this machine.
  • medi01 - Sunday, September 25, 2011 - link

    "I have not yet used AMD's switchable setup. Being that its so new, I am not surprised that it is not yet perfect"

    Especially on nVidia supplied notebook. ;)
  • JarredWalton - Tuesday, September 27, 2011 - link

    Which you can buy from Sony. It was unopened, with absolutely no tampering by anyone other than myself -- and the same goes for the Acer. If anyone can point me to a better AMD + Intel laptop with dynamic switchable graphics (Vostro 3450 with HD 6470M? I don't think so...), let me know. I've also talked several times with AMD and asked them to provide me with new drivers and/or a different laptop. We'll see if they can do so, because honestly I'd love for AMD to have a more compelling offering in this area.
  • mercblue281 - Tuesday, September 20, 2011 - link

    Can you guys please have someone proofread before posting?
    "...and they haven’t been able to get use one yet..."
    In the FIRST paragraph? Really?
    Come on! I know the internet has dumbed down the general population's grammar and spelling but you guys are better than this.
  • jeremyshaw - Tuesday, September 20, 2011 - link

    on the first page, you mention "HD6700m line is rebadged HD5600m part"

    which isn't true, since the HD6700m line has 480 shaders, and GDDR5, both of which are lacking from the HD5600m.
  • overseer - Tuesday, September 20, 2011 - link

    "If an OEM were willing to commit the resources necessary to at least do bi-monthly driver updates for switchable graphics, that would also be sufficient, but they’d need a proven track record of doing so—something no laptop manufacturer has ever achieved."

    Can't say I agree with you here.

    I have an Acer Aspire 4745G (i3 330M + HD5650M, manually switchable) that I bought in Apr. 2010. Over a year and half Acer has been offering the GPU driver updates for it (once in a quarter or 2 months AFAICR).

    Check the 4745G downloads on Acer's support page and you'll find the latest AMD VGA driver update which came out on 2011/09/07.
    http://us.acer.com/ac/en/US/content/drivers

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