NVIDIA GeForce GTX 660 Ti Round-Up Review
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A follow-up to Capcom’s Lost Planet : Extreme Condition, Lost Planet 2 is a third person shooter that takes place again on E.D.N. III ten years after the story line of the first title. We ran the game’s DX11 mode which makes heavy use of DX11 Tessellation and Displacement mapping and soft shadows. There are also areas of the game that make use of DX11 DirectCompute for things like wave simulation in areas with water. This is one game engine that looks significantly different in DX11 mode when you compare certain environmental elements and character rendering in its DX9 mode versus DX11. We used the Test B option built into the benchmark tool with all graphics options set to their High Quality values. |
The Lost Planet 2 benchmark has always been a strong suit for NVIDIA's DX11-class GPUs, so it's no surprise that the new GeForce GTX 660 Ti cards once again had no trouble pulling ahead of the Radeons, with the sole exception being the flagship Radeon HD 7970 GHz Edition.
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Just Cause 2 was released in March '10, from developers Avalanche Studios and Eidos Interactive. The game makes use of the Avalanche Engine 2.0, an updated version of the similarly named original. It is set on the fictional island of Panau in southeast Asia, and you play the role of Rico Rodriquez. We benchmarked the graphics cards in this article using one of the built-in demo runs called Concrete Jungle. The test results shown here were run at various resolutions and settings. This game also supports a few CUDA-enabled features, but they were left disabled to keep the playing field level, since AMD's cards can't use them. |
The performance trend in the Just Cause 2 benchmark is similar to Lost Planet 2's. In this test, the new GeForce GTX 660 Ti cards are able to outrun the Radeon HD 7950 again, but they trail the Radeon HD 7970 by a small margin.