Publisher: Electronic Arts
We tested the game using the 64-bit executable under and DirectX 10 with the 1.21 patch applied. We used a custom timedemo recorded on the Harbor map which is more representative of gameplay than the built-in benchmark that renders things much faster than you're going to experience in game.
For our testing, we set all the settings to High. Because of how intense the game is, we tested with both anti-aliasing and anisotropic filtering disabled at resolutions above 1680x1050 for the time being. There is currently no support for anisotropic filtering in the game, but you can still force it from the driver control panel.
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Asus P6T Deluxe
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Gigabyte GA-EX58-UD4P
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MSI Eclipse SLI
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Foxconn Blood Rage
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Gigabyte GA-EX58-DS4
Frames Per Second - higher is better
The Blood Rage performance in
Crysis is OK, but it still slips slight behind the MSI, Asus and Gigabyte boards here, although only by a small margin. The only board it manages to beat is the cheapest Gigabyte board.
Publisher: Ubisoft
Far Cry 2 is the latest first person shooter from Ubisoft, and while it continues the
Far Cry franchise that Crytek started in 2004, this game is built on its own in-house engine and has no association - other than its name - to anything Crytek has worked on or is working on now. We used a retail version of the game patched to version 1.02, and used the in-built "Action" gameplay demo set to Ultra-Very High settings under DirectX 10.
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Gigabyte GA-EX58-UD4P
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Asus P6T Deluxe
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Gigabyte GA-EX58-DS4
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Foxconn Blood Rage
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MSI Eclipse SLI
Frames Per Second - higher is better
Basically the same again - the Blood Rage slightly exceeds the performance of the MSI, but its low minimum frame rate doesn't keep up with the Asus and Gigabyte boards. It ends up a couple of frames per second behind in this measurement.
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