Featured

Battlefield 4 Graphics Performance Overview With Current Generation GPUs

Introduction


Battlefield 4 has been one of the biggest game releases so far this year for gamers on all gaming platforms. The FPS title from EA and DICE has got off to a relatively shaky start with numerous audio, graphical and gameplay problems across the various platforms it was released on. In fact for many Battlefield 4 owners the game is still in a dysfunctional or buggy state, but you can expect (or hope) that EA and DICE will begin to patch and fix the majority of the problems within the coming weeks as they have said they will. The shaky launch aside, what most PC owners/gamers want to know, if they haven’t already found out, is how do current generation GPUs perform in Battlefield 4 on the PC?

Today we put that question to the test with an extensive, albeit not entirely complete, range of current generation AMD and Nvidia GPUs. On the AMD side we have the R7 260X, R9 270, R9 270X, R9 280X, R9 290 and R9 290X while on the Nvidia side we have a few more offerings with the GTX 650 Ti Boost, GTX 660, GTX 760, GTX 770, GTX 780, GTX 780 Ti and GTX Titan. All of the aforementioned graphics cards are current offerings and to the sharp-minded readers you will notice some graphics cards are missing. Mainly the current generation lower-end graphics cards from both AMD and Nvidia are absent, that includes the Nvidia GTX 650, GT 640 GDDR5, GT 640 DDR3 and the AMD R7 250 and R7 240. The main reason for not testing these graphics cards, other than that we didn’t have most of them, is because they simply aren’t that capable of running such a high end gaming title. Of course that’s not to say they can’t but given the nature of the resolutions we test (mainly 1080p or above) and the quality settings our readers like to see (very high or ultra) these GPUs simply aren’t cut out for the test. Arguably they are more aimed at gamers with 1366 x 768 monitors tackling medium-high details but I digress. The system requirements for Battlefield 4 reveal a similar picture, if you want a smooth gameplay experience then you need an AMD Radeon HD 7870 or Nvidia GTX 660 or better. However, those system requirements show you very little about what you can expect at different resolutions.  So without any further ado let us show you our results and show you exactly how AMD and Nvidia’s offerings stack up!

Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6

Ryan Martin

Disqus Comments Loading...

Recent Posts

Apacer AS2280F4 PCIe Gen5 1TB M.2 SSD Review

Apacer is a leading name for high-performance storage and memory, and now with the release…

10 hours ago

Corsair Launches New RS MAX Series Fans

Corsair already has the enthusiast market taken care of, with one of the most comprehensive…

14 hours ago

NVIDIA RTX Remix Gets DLSS 3.5 With Ray Reconstruction

The wealth of incredible RTX Remix mods has been pretty amazing, as we've seen so…

14 hours ago

SteelSeries Unveils The White Arctis Nova Pro Series Headphones

SteelSeries has always had some of the absolute best gaming headsets on the market, spanning…

15 hours ago

NVIDIA DLSS 3 Comes to EVERSPACE 2 and Gray Zone Warfare

There are now over 500 games and applications that feature RTX technologies, and that number…

15 hours ago

Total War Warhammer III’s New DLC Launches

Total War: Warhammer III is one of those games that have an endless amount of…

1 day ago