Darren S said:
Going slightly back to the topic with FEAR performance and personal levels of what is deemed 'acceptable' - I often find benchmarking figures to be quite misleading. Take BF2 for arguments sake. I currently run it at 1280x1024 with everything set to maximum and it plays fine. Try it again with everything set to maximum, but this time set the anti-aliasing set to 4x (the maximum BF2 will natively support).
The level of clarity and perceived smoothness is massively increased - it justs looks and plays better with AA switched on. Yet any benchmarking utility worth its salt will tell you that from the performance score point of view, it has taken a significant hit.
Basically, what your PC tells you what's 'better' compared to what looks better are often two, very different things.
D.
Totally agree, I've had some wierd performance figures with certain games, COD2 for instance works, looks and generally is better on my machine when playing at 1280x1024, its jerky and not at all smooth when playing at lower resolutions, meaning i have to turn a fair bit of eye candy off first. Where with most other games, performance is much better at 1024x768 which is what i'd expect anyway...
Roy, did the time demo test and used FRAPS and as was mentioned above the figures differed slighly;
1024x768
19
44
96
I spose i slightly exagerated the figures, but find performance during FEAR combat online is better still, using FRAPS I got an average (and by average i mean clocking it every so often and noting the frame rate...) of between 35-45, at no point (even during a team deathmatch with 16 people) did it drop bellow 25fps.
What this proves i dont really know, but like i mentioned before, im happy with the results. With it being a Dell i cannot OC on a large scale, but have the GPU OC'd from stock 500/900 to 552/1200 and get no crashes, hangups or artifacts.