![]() ![]() ![]() I wish I was able to afford time before this review was published to test the GTX 1080 in DOOM again, as I feel like NVIDIA made some major strides in its driver since the GTX 1080 launch for certain titles. Testing: Our test location starts us off at the bottom of a short set of stairs early on in the game, where we must climb them, open up a door, and then go to a big room where demons are taken care of and the benchmark is stopped. As we hoped, the game proves to be more than suitable for GPU benchmarking. For this reason, this latest DOOM feels a bit special, even though it follows DOOM 3 up eleven years later. DOOMĭOOM 3 was released a couple of months before Techgage launched (March 1, 2005, for the record), and it was a game featured in our GPU testing right from the get-go. The Ti simply smooths things over even more, exceeding 60 FPS on the minimum. On the ultrawide side, the GTX 1080 can handle this game no problem. 51 FPS is no 60 FPS, but it’s still what I’d consider “great”. Today, the GTX 1080 Ti handles those settings without issue. Not long after this game came out, I tested it at 4K / Very High, and it was downright painful. Still, 51 FPS is admirable, for a game as demanding as this one. While the GTX 1080 Ti exceeded 60 FPS at 4K in Battlefield 4, Crysis 3 proved a wee bit too demanding. Once this is done, the player is run back underneath a nearby roof, at which point the benchmark ends. Testing: The game’s Red Star Rising level is chosen for benchmarking here, with the lowest difficulty level chosen (dying during a benchmarking run is a little infuriating!) The level starts us out in a broken-down building and leads us down to a river, where we need to activate an alien device. Even though the game came out in 2013, if you’re able to equip Very High settings at your resolution of choice, you’re in a great spot. Fortunately, though, that doesn’t matter, because the game is still more intensive than most current titles. Like Battlefield 4, Crysis 3 is getting a little up there in years. It should take very little effort to attain 60 FPS at 4K on this GPU even still, with anti-aliasing being a great first choice to whittle down, as well as ambient occlusion, effects, and post-process.įor ultrawide, the GTX 1080 Ti can eat this game for breakfast. It is important to note, though, that online play is likely to introduce many more variables and graphically demanding situations, so this performance isn’t representative of that. As the GTX 1080 was tested a while ago, I’m sure driver updates could push that card even closer to the 60 FPS mark, but the Ti simply blows right on past that landmark, keeping close to 60 FPS at the minimum. Poor: Expect real headaches from the awful performance.BF4 isn’t as demanding as the new BF1 (which will be part of our GPU test suite overhaul, due next month), but the GTX 1080 Ti becomes the first graphics card to power it at 4K, at max detail, and breach 60 FPS. ![]() Good: Nothing too impressive it gets the job done (60 FPS will require tweaking). Great: Hit 60 FPS with high quality settings. As future-proofed as it gets.Įxcellent: Surpass 60 FPS at high quality settings with ease. The problem is with 3440x1440 since it's so close to 4K, you could make an argument that a 10 Ti really are the best cards for 3440x1440 to 4K Now if you run it at low/med and tweak some stuff you probably could eek out some performance but I would try to score a 1070/Ti at least if you plan to game at 3440x1440. With my prior GTX 1070 I was getting 15-25 FPS less, so I can only imagine a 1050 Ti on High/Ultra setting would be greatly bellow the desired 60 FPS ![]() I have a 3440 X 1440 100HZ monitor and running a i7 6700K 4.0 16GB and a GTX 1080 and on Ultra and sometimes high I am getting 70-80 FPS PUBG (High), 70-80 NBA 2K18 (Ultra), Doom 100 (Ultra), Fifa 19 200+ (Ultra). But not in the near future.ĭepends what settings and FPS you desire but from my perspective no. I am planning on upgrading my gpu to a 1070ti or a used 1080ti. I dont have a lot of experience at this matter. On titles like COD WWII, witcher 3, battlefield1, etc. Now it makes me wonder if my 1050ti will be capable of giving me 60fps at this resolution at low settings. Hi, i Am thinking of buying an 34inch 3440x1440 ultrawide 60hz monitor. ![]()
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