Civilization V

Our final game, Civilization V, gives us an interesting look at things that other RTSes cannot match, with a much weaker focus on shading in the game world and a much greater focus on creating the geometry needed to bring such a world to life. In doing so it uses a slew of DirectX 11 technologies, including tessellation for said geometry, driver command lists for reducing CPU overhead, and compute shaders for on-the-fly texture decompression.

Civilization V - 1920x1080 - Maximum Quality + 4x MSAA

Civilization V is an interesting game due to the fact that it puts the 7790, GTX 650 Ti Boost, and 7850 so close together in performance. It stresses just about everything at some point – tessellation/geometry, ROP throughput, compute, and texturing – but it’s really shading/texturing that form the biggest bottleneck here. This works out well enough for NVIIDA, allowing them to get within 4% of the 7850, while still keeping the GTX 650 Ti Boost and GTX 660 well separated.

Battlefield 3 Compute Performance
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  • Oxford Guy - Tuesday, March 26, 2013 - link

    Hopefully only to be laughed out of the market.
  • xdesire - Tuesday, March 26, 2013 - link

    Nvidia's last struggles with Kepler gen. :)
  • Eugene86 - Tuesday, March 26, 2013 - link

    So this card beats out the slightly cheaper new 7790 in every game as well as the slightly more expensive 7850 in half of the games?

    Looks like a pretty good deal to me. What reason do people have to buy AMD again?
  • Zstream - Tuesday, March 26, 2013 - link

    I think the only game it won was in Shogun and bf3? I'm not sure on your statement or if you read the article or not.
  • Eugene86 - Tuesday, March 26, 2013 - link

    Did you read the article? Because the only games (one game) that the nvidia card lost in is Dirt.
  • aTonyAtlaw - Tuesday, March 26, 2013 - link

    I think you were looking at the GTX 660, friend. The 650 Ti Boost, the card under review, placed beneath the 7850 in nearly every test. They even talk about this on the conclusions page.
  • Eugene86 - Tuesday, March 26, 2013 - link

    I was talking about the 7790, that's why.
  • Warren21 - Tuesday, March 26, 2013 - link

    The comment you were replying to was challenging your statement of the 650 TiB beating the 7850 in "half". Two does not constitute half, it constitutes two.
  • just4U - Wednesday, March 27, 2013 - link

    Well Eugene, looking at your original statement you seem to be saying it beats the 7790 and the 7850.. (you added in the "as well as.." ) Anyway, no clue how the 2G 7790 does or how the 1G 650TIB does.. so it's all sorta moot. On paper if you ask me the 650 is the better card overall.
  • EzioAs - Tuesday, March 26, 2013 - link

    Bundled games? HD7850 uses less power and overclocks better? AMD cuts the price of their cards way more resulting in better performance per dollar cards before Nvidia actually release one that could fight back?

    It's true the GTX650ti Boost does seem pretty good for a newly released card in terms of performance per dollar but your question just shows a little bit "fanboyism".

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