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ATI Radeon HD 3850 256MB Crossfire
 
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Max Slowik
Beth
AMD
May. 14, 2008
Conclusion

Two cards don't add up to the same kind of value. Doubling the cards doesn't make each individual card magically better at anti-aliasing. The heart of the issue is bandwidth, and with only 256MBs of GDDR3 memory, running on a 256-bit bus, the limit is the hardware itself. And even though most of the time the second card added about a 30% FPS boost, there were plenty of times when it didn't improve things at all.

In the Catalyst Control Center, it's possible to tweak the settings to open up the dual-GPU features that improve anti-aliasing as well as all-around performance, and get some impressive results. Don't get me wrong, it's not a terribly spent $300, especially if you're looking at any number of passively-cooled HD 3870s, but overall, they don't beat an 8800 GTX--which cost $450--it's just that it takes a little more tweaking to get the full value of two cards together.

Which is, to be fair, greater than two-thirds of an 8800 GTX.

Pros

Played games well at super-high resolutions
Near-perfect video playback
Still quiet
CrossFire!

Cons

No longer a budget buy
Still not that great at anti-aliasing

Not nearly as power-efficient

 
<< Previous
Page 9 of 9
Home >>
Page 1: Introduction, The Card & Bundle
Page 2: Testing Methodology and Specifications
Page 3: Testing - HL2 Episode 1
Page 4: Testing - F.E.A.R.
Page 5: Testing - Company of Heroes
Page 6: Testing - Prey
Page 7: Testing - 3Dmark 06 & HQV
Page 8: Performance Summary, Power & Noise, and Overclocking
Page 9: Conclusion

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