The AMD Radeon R9 295X2 Review
by Ryan Smith on April 8, 2014 8:00 AM EST- Posted in
- GPUs
- AMD
- Radeon
- Radeon 200
Thief
Our newest addition to our benchmark suite is Eidos Monreal’s stealth action game, Thief. Set amidst a Victorian-era fantasy environment, Thief is an Unreal Engine 3 based title which makes use of a number of supplementary Direct3D 11 effects, including tessellation and advanced lighting. Adding further quality to the game on its highest settings is support for SSAA, which can eliminate most forms of aliasing while bringing even the most powerful video cards to their knees.
Our first major review with Thief finds AMD taking a small lead at 2160p, with NVIDIA returning the favor at 1440p. In the case of 1440p both the AMD and NVIDIA setups are able to deliver well over 60fps (despite the heavy use of SSAA at this setting), while at 2160p even the 295X2 falls just a hair short of cracking 60fps even with the slightly lower quality settings.
Meanwhile when it comes to minimum framerates, while AMD and NVIDIA are close together at 1440p and 2160p with Low quality settings, moving to 2160p with High quality settings pretty much busts the NVIDIA SLI setup. It’s difficult to say for sure on the basis of a single SLI setup, but it looks like the memory requirements at these settings may be overwhelming the 3GB NVIDIA cards, especially in light of the GTX Titan Black’s unusual performance lead over the GTX 780 Ti. The additional buffer handling for SLI further eats into the pool of memory available for these cards, which in turn further hamstrings performance.
On the other hand, other than the GTX 780 SLI’s initial bottoming out in this benchmark, NVIDIA does deliver stronger frame pacing performance. In both cases the 295X2 delivers acceptable consistency, staying under 20% variance, but it’s still a wider degree of variance than what we’re seeing with the GTX 780 Ti SLI setup.
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Samus - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link
Very pretty cooler.slickr - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link
Is it me or is pricing on graphic cards INSANE? $1500 for this and then $3000 for Titan Z? I mean give me a break, I'd buy a freaking car with that money.stefpats - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link
my question is: is there going to be a GTX 790 or that plan is gone? i would like to compare similar things,and then decide what i m replacing 690 with.I ve waited long enough it's time for an upgrade.TheinsanegamerN - Friday, April 11, 2014 - link
My guess, no. They will have the 890, skipping over the 790 completely. 20nm and maxwell will make for a much more interesting dual GPUekagori - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link
I like what AMD has done here, paying more attention to the high end packaging is good to see. Hopefully this trickles down to the next generation on 20nm. Considering how far AMD has been behind NVidia in terms of power consumption, seeing this card average under 500W at full load is pretty good. That's under 250W per chip, pretty close to what a 780ti does. You pay a slight premium for the better case and clc and still better than what NVidia wants for the Z.HammerStrike - Tuesday, April 8, 2014 - link
Shame there is still no HDMI 2.0 support on any consumer GPU's, including this one. Given that this is arround $250 more then two custom cooled 290X's with similar noise profiles it doesn't make much sense (at least to me) in standard or full size cases, but would be an interesting choice for a HTPC. Card is overkill for 1080p, but with new 4K TV's coming out that support HDMI 2.0 this would have made sense for that. As it is, while I can appreciate the design and performance, I don't see the value prop vs a couple of individual 290x's in CF.TinHat - Friday, April 11, 2014 - link
Can you not just use Displayport like everyone else? I believe its got far superior resolution support and because its loyalty free to produce, its cheaper too!Camel51 - Wednesday, April 9, 2014 - link
What is the static pressure of the 120mm fan? Is it easily replaceable? I'm wondering if it would make sense to replace it with an SP120 HP edition, a Noctua, or any other high static pressure/low noise fan (even if it would require modding it in by cutting wires).The review was excellent. Very informative and interesting. Took me a whole hour to read. Haha. I just wish the card was short enough to fit in the Obsidian 250D. Now for the Ares III!
Ryan Smith - Wednesday, April 9, 2014 - link
I don't have any information on the static pressure, but the fan is easily replaceable. It's just a standard 120mm fan; so any other 2pin/3pin 120mm fan should work.henrikfm - Wednesday, April 9, 2014 - link
Does it make coffee?