Palit GeForce GTX 260 SP216 Sonic review | test

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VGA performance: Far Cry 2 (DX10)

Setup your monitor

Before playing games, setting up your monitor's contrast & brightness levels is a very important thing to do. I realized recently that a lot of you guys have set up your monitor improperly. How do we know this? Because we receive a couple of emails every now and then telling us that a reader can't distinguish between the benchmark charts (colors) in our reviews. We realized, if that happens, your monitor is not properly set up.

monitor-setup.png

This simple test pattern is evenly spaced from 0 to 255 brightness levels, with no profile embedded. If your monitor is correctly set up, you should be able to distinguish each step, and each step should be roughly visually distinct from its neighbors by the same amount. Also, the dark-end step differences should be about the same as the light-end step differences. Finally, the first step should be completely black.

Far Cry 2

Throw your memory back to the year 2004 and the release of the innovative Far Cry on PC. Developer Crytek managed to fashion one of the most convincing and striking locales in all of gaming, and satisfied gamers with the freedom to pass through the landscape and tackle enemies in almost any way they saw fit. You surely remember Jack Carver and that things were about to get seriously messed up for you? Well, tough luck. You are no longer at that deserted tropical island but hop into a jeep and arrive at the sandy savannah surroundings of Africa. And that's a change... as much as you'll no longer run into any mutants, aliens, or any superpowers or psychic powers. Also - you are no longer Jack Carver, you assume the role of one of nine different mercenaries who are embedded in the midst of a brutal civil war which rages in an imaginary African nation.
Everything that goes down is involved in a dirty little bush war in central Africa and you'll have to use a rusty AK-47 and whatever bits of scavenged land mine you can duct-tape together. Two factions struggle for supremacy: the United Front for Liberation and Labour and the Alliance for Popular Resistance, and both are known for blood and control.

We start off with a title I like very much. Not so much for the gameplay, yet the rendered environment and how the game can react to it. We are in high-quality DX10 mode with 8x AA (anti-aliasing) and 16x AF (anisotropic filtering).

The cards used throughout this test:

  • GeForce GTX 260 SP216 (65nm)
  • GeForce GTC 260 SP216 (55nm) Palit Sonic
  • GeForce GTX 280 1GB
  • Radeon HD 4870 1024MB

As you can see the SONIC is performing well instantly thanks to its higher clocks. Only in 2560x1600 the 1024MB cards show muscle thanks to it's larger framebuffer (videocard memory).

This is a little new thing I am trying out. But sometimes we stare ourselves completely and utterly blind at comparative performance. I figured it'd be nice to include a chart with just the test card alone, so you can see and get a grasp as to where the performance really is, and how it scales in monitor resolution.

Now, it seems that at 2560x1600 we precisely hit a framebuffer threshold for the GTX 260 Palit Sonic, but at 8x Anti-aliasing that makes a lot of sense. 4xAA would be no okay there.

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