DDR-RAM Gaming GPUs Reviews

The Crew 2 – a further test with frame times, variances, memory and CPU usage

Comparison with 10 graphics cards in comparison

With maximum ultra-settings and manually via the driver on x16 beaten anisotropic filter, the chaff now separates from the wheat in the benchmark bar, because the frame limiter is practically no longer applicable. Everything below the Radeon R9 390X, which again keeps up well, then everything gets into the almost unplayable.

The bars already show where exactly Bartel gets his must, but the curves of the five fastest cards speak volumes. The old GeForce GTX 970 still looks surprisingly good despite its crooked memory model, but is still behind the GeForce GTX 1060 3G, which has been slashed to a full 3GB.

But even this point can be looked at in a more nuanced way if we look down from the rather coarse FPS as the average value of all frames within this respective second to the real frame times, which, as always, from a low-level measurement Come:

Let's look at the five taillights again this time, because the differences are visually greater:

The difference in variances is even greater, where you can also see very clearly that the old Radeon R9 390X suddenly ranks at the very end. A position that, by the way, cannot be read from the normal bars. Which in turn also means that you really have to go into more detail later in order to evaluate such "outliers" objectively and fairly.

Despite the highest variances, the old Radeon R9 390X is at the forefront when it comes to the subjectively perceived smoothness of the entire sequence!  Of course, we also recommend the single map results in the next section.

Individual results of the tested maps

This single listing must prove once again where each card is sorted individually. Please browse through!

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