3DMark Vantage
3DMark Vantage is the newest revision of Futuremark’s popular 3DMark suite. Strictly compatible with DX10, it is truly the next generation 3D benchmark.
We used the default ‘Performance’ settings preset, and the usual 1280×1024 resolution. Detailed benchmark settings can be seen below:
While 3DMark contains many platform tests, we’ll be focusing on the GPU tests and the final score for the purposes of this review.
The 9800GTX+ leads the HD4850 by over 1000 points in the overall score, but surprisingly, the HD4850 leads the 9800GTX+ in the overall GPU score. Clearly something else is throwing the overall results in NVIDIA’s favor as we’ll see shortly.
In the two game tests, we see the two cards performing almost identically with test 1 slightly preferring ATI and test 2 slightly preferring NVIDIA.
Clearly, the source of the higher 9800GTX+ overall score was the CPU tests. 3DMark Vantage can take advantage of NVIDIA’s CUDA-based PhysX engine in some of the tests. As you can see above, hardware physics is a tremendous improvement over CPU physics processing alone. This is somewhat of an unfair advantage as modern ATI cards also support physics processing, yet Vantage does not appear to be making use of it.
Again, we see a very specific example of this PhysX advantage in the second CPU test, “Crash’N’Burn Physics.” The NVIDIA cards have a significant advantage in this particular test.