World in Conflict
03:50 - Thursday 3 July 2008 by Fedy Abi-Chahla, and Florian Charpentier
Source: Tom's Hardware – Keywords: radeon, hd, 4870
Source: Tom's Hardware – Keywords: radeon, hd, 4870
Table of content:
World in Conflict
Ad


Running the power-hungry World in Conflict, the Radeon HD 4870 placed closer to the GeForce GTX 280 and increased its distance on the GTX 260, topping it by an average 17% – a clear advantage. And here again performance with antialiasing enabled was just as surprising. The 4870 matched the GTX 280 at 2560*1600 + filters despite its limited 512 MB of memory (and despite the game’s being unplayable at those settings). `
- Previous page Crysis
- Next page Supreme Commander
Ad
Google Ads
Ad
The Graphics Cards Articles and reviews
- ATI Radeon HD 4850: Smarter by Design?
- iBuypower Gamer 942IL: Best of the Best?
- Nvidia's CUDA: The End of the CPU?
- Nvidia GeForce GTX 260/280 Review
- Quad SLI Vs. 3-Way SLI
- Comparative Component Charts
- Best Graphics Cards for the Money: June 08
- Radeon 3850 AGP Plus Single-Core CPU
- GPU vs. CPU Upgrade: Extensive Tests
- NForce 780a SLI Debuts Hybrid SLI
News
Reviews
Forum
Related Content

Seems like this is going to be my new graphics card
Im currently running 2x 3870s in crossfire - would it be better performance (and power)wise to buy a 4870 and run that instead?
I got two of these in crossfire and even with a Q6600 cpu unclocked it makes Crysis fly. Fans are suprisingly quite but Temps are Hot. The back of my PC is almost too hot to touch! Had no problems running any games so far drivers seem quite stable.
an single 4870 is about 2 times more powerfull then your 3870 in CF mode you be able to now use AA as well as thay fixed the AA (thay put Hardware back in there so it can do aa now and very well)
the card seems to beat the 260 alot of the time and thats only one card get 2x 4870 in CF and when CF is working you out do an gtx 280 for the same as 2x4870 in CF (basicly same price)
the 2x and 3x ATI cards was not so good
This is an amazing card. As an avid Nvidia fan, I never thought I'd say that. And yet, here I sit with a smile on my face, content in the knowledge that I am now about to upgrade my ancient 6600GT to the ATI HD4870 which kicks the GTX260's ass at a much better price. In fact I couldn't care if Nvidia made the 260 cheaper, I'd still go out and support ATI for having the balls to make such a good card at such a good price. At the end of the day, a price war is fantastic for the consumer, and in order to keep that up, we gotta support ATI for this round...
Guess what chaps... Nvidia has decided to drop their prices for the GTX 280 by $90 and the 260 by $30, due to the sheer dominance of the HD4870! Check out the link: http://www.tomshardware.com/news/a [...] ,5818.html
Basically the GTX 280 is set end up costing about $559 and the GTX 260 about $359 after the price cuts...
And even after hearing that news, which clearly demonstrates the power of competition, I'm still getting myself a 4870 (perhaps even the 1GB version)... Suck on that Nvidia.
Isn't unreal 3 cuda optimised to run the physics through the GPU, hence leaving the CPU free to help boost the framerates.
I think it is unfair to use a game as a benchmark that has been clearly optimised in this way.
On the other hand if that is the road developers are going to go down then AMD should pull their finger out and get their physics acceleration stuff out.
I'll be getting the 1GB version as soon as I come back from my holiday!
Isn't unreal 3 cuda optimised to run the physics through the GPU, hence leaving the CPU free to help boost the framerates. I think it is unfair to use a game as a benchmark that has been clearly optimised in this way. On the other hand if that is the road developers are going to go down then AMD should pull their finger out and get their physics acceleration stuff out.
The CPU won't give much of a boost to framerates as such, but having the physics somewhere quicker than the CPU will generally help the system as a whole.
Note about memory transfer frequency vs bus width.
Don't forget that power consumption increase with frequency is quadratic, which is not the case with bus widening. The main problems really are
1) technical: routing complexity not only on the PCB (as said in the article) but also on the die,
2) financial: pad buffers take a lot of silicon area, which increases the cost and reduces the yield.
Hi guys, need a little advice...
I'm keen to get the ASUS EAH4870/G/HDMI/512MB but was wondering about the 1GB version that's supposed to be coming out in August. Do you think there will be a major difference in speed if I'm using a 19" wide or 22" wide screen, between the 512MB version and the 1GB version?
If not, I think I'll just get the 512...
Thanks!
Can't wait for the 4870X2
Sooo depressed now... bought a HD3850 six months ago to replace MY 6600GT, and now jackbnimble is making me very jealous... should have waited!
Which is part of the reason why UE3 games (UT3, Mass Effect etc.) have such an abnormally (not anomalously) low score in comparison. BUT there is actually supposed to be a third party working on translating nVidia's Ageia stuff to AMD cards very successfully (albeit illegally) so AMD does have the hardware for it... just not the software license! >
And AFAIK there's a lot of politics and licensing behind the CUDA/physics angle... Intel has Havok and nVidia has Ageia, AMD has the hardware but no code for it
for gaming the 38x0 cards was not worth it as you could not use AA as it killed the card due to not having any texture back enders it was all been done in the GPU core {SP} an 8800gt would of been an better buy as it would of been able the same price, starting from the 4850 well worth it (it can do 4xAA as well)
the physX think well some one has made an ATI>CUDA>physX so that it can be used on ATI hardware Nvidia are actively supporting this,ATI is not supporting it but are not stopping at as well (as its the physX driver and the CUDA thats been modified to make it work)
CUDA is Free and open as why above Nvida is actively supporting it, this should make physics move along faster in game support beening on Nvidia or ATI cards
The card is a great deal.......I own a 3870x2 whic is outstanding in price and quality.Hope nvidia catch up with the current dominator in graphics..... AMD for life and ATI RADEON till death.....
The card is a great deal.......I own a 3870x2 whic is outstanding in price and quality.Hope nvidia catch up with the current dominator in graphics..... AMD for life and ATI RADEON till death.....
I hope AMD didn't put these price hoping that they will sell enough to get theyr money back, what I mean is I hope that 4800 will not be a los of money for them, becouse I hope to see even better cards at better prices! Also I feel sorry for nVidia in a way, they were hard kicked in the ass!
HD4870 can compeate with GeForce 6600GT and 8600M.
9800 gx2 is 87% faster than HD4870.
HD4870 is same fast than HD3870.
Some tests from Apricot Optimizing GLSL;
http://www.yofrankie.org/?p=261#comments
Sorry wrong link in 30/07/2008 08:59
http://www.yofrankie.org/?p=258#comments