Gainward 6800GT GLH
4. 3DMark05
3DMark05 - Page 04
With 3DMark05, Futuremark continues the tradition in its benchmarking software by providing a state-of-the-art Microsoft ® DirectX ® 9 3D performance benchmark.
3DMark05 is an all new 3DMark version, making the most out of Microsoft's DirectX
9. The previous version, 3DMark03, provided a nice testbench for this
technology. However, 3DMark03 used DirectX 9 specific features in
a limited
manner, because fully supporting hardware
was rare at the time of its launch. In contrast, 3DMark05 requires DirectX
9 hardware with full support for at least Shader Model 2, and takes shader
usage to never before seen levels.
Just like its predecessors, 3DMark05's point system is set so that at the moment
of release, the high-end VGA cards available on the market can only score around
5000 3DMarks, whereas the worst card that meets the program's requirements,
yields a score of 1000.
Game Test 1 - Return to Proxycon
Being the sequel to the "Battle of Proxycon" from 3DMark03, in "Return to Proxycon" we're once again set in space and the battle continues as space pirates invade a cargo ship in order to take control of its valuable cargo.
This test, tries to simulate a futuristic first-person shooter game with all the high details that such a game entails. The dynamic shadows, highly detailed environment and advanced lighting techniques, ensure that under normal circumstances, no recent card can run it with decent frame rates.
At last, a decent performance on this Game test. For the first time, we were able to actually follow the storyline of the game test without being distracted by the low framerates we had witnessed with other cards.
Game Test 2 - Firefly Forest
A forest is filled with magic fireflies at night. The moon is nearly full, illuminating the forest with a bluish faint light. The magic fireflies have flickering, bright green lights that playfully move around the forest.
This scene is a nice example of a smaller scale outdoor scene with rich vegetation. Immediate visibility is only short range, and there is a skybox surrounding the whole scene.
A large number of trees with their branches swinging separately, and dense vegetation being dynamically distributed according to the camera movements, make this test the most demanding of the three.
The results we got demonstrate the game test's GPU requirements. The constant use of dynamic shadows and complexity of the grass and trees drop the framerate to 15.
Game Test 3 - Canyon Flight
A Jules Verne type airship flies through a canyon guarded by a dangerous sea monster. The airmen defend their ship using heavy cannons, but these seem to have no effect on the huge sea monster. Finally, the crew manages a narrow escape using the airship's "last resort" afterburners.
This scene is fairly complex with large areas of water reflecting the high canyon walls. The water is actually one of the key points of interest in this scene. The water not only does realistic looking reflections and refractions, it has a depth fog, making the sea monster swimming under the airship appear deep down in the water. The air in this scene also uses a volumetric fog, making distant cliffs in the canyon appear far away.
The resulting chart expresses Gainward's 6800GT superiority against the lower class X300 and X600XT. The game test ran smoothly and we actually enjoyed watching as the card successfully unraveled all of its details without too many problems.
Final Score
3DMarks on 3DMark05 are now calculated with the following formula:
(Game Test 1 * Game Test 2 * Game Test 3)^0.33 * 250
This is basically the geometric mean of the total frames in each game multiplied by 250, which means that all game tests are on an equal par.
Let’s see the result for the 6800GT GLH:
Excellent performance. It might not be close to the 7000 3DMarks which indicate an overall sufficient framerate for all game tests but comparing it to the X300 and X600, you get 3-4 times their performance with only 2 times the money needed for an X600 XT.