AMD and NVIDIA are the two obvious participants, but with Intel continuing to increase the performance of their Processor Graphics solutions it's also important to see how they fare with new releases.
It's worth noting that testing gaming performance at the time of launch may also tell an interesting story about the state of drivers from the various GPU companies. To be clear, we're not replacing our GPU reviews, but we hope to augment our other coverage with increased coverage of the recent gaming releases. But if you're in the market for a new GPU, you probably want to use if for playing games, which means seeing how new games perform on a selection of hardware is useful. Our GPU reviews do a good job of giving a broad overview of the performance from the latest graphics cards on a smaller subset of games, and it's basically impossible to test every new GPU on every game at the time of launch. S omething we've wanted to do more in the past is to provide smaller updates looking at the performance of recent game releases. Of course part of that stems from the use of super-sampling anti-aliasing at the highest quality settings, but even without SSAA Metro: Last Light can be a beast. We've been using Metro: Last Light as one of our gaming performance benchmarks almost since it first came out in May, 2013, and it's still one of the most demanding games around. Fundamentally, that means less for Metro: Last Light than it does for Metro 2033, but there are still some visual changes, and that potentially means performance changes as well. The games have both been remastered using the latest version of 4A Engine, with updates for the latest generation of console hardware among other things. Here's what that looks like, this is the last stage of the benchmark.Last month 4A Games released updated versions of the two earlier games in the Metro series, Metro 2033 Redux and Metro: Last Light Redux. If you like to try a test run, the game has a built in benchmark. Let's head onwards to the next page where we'll look at the performance.
Both NVIDIA and AMD have released these drivers being optimized for Crysis 3.
GeForce cards use the latest 320.14 WHQL drivers ( download) and for AMD Radeon graphics cards we used the latest 13.5 Beta build 2 driver ( download).
Each card runs on the same PC with the same operating system clone.