1070 metro last light benchmark
We're seeing an output of 71FPS AVG on the RX 470 Platinum Edition from Sapphire, with the GTX 970 SSC tailing tightly at 70.3FPS AVG. The above benchmark shows The Division with High settings.
#1070 metro last light benchmark 1080p#
But, again, the card was built for 1080p – not for 1440p. The 0.1% lows are below 20FPS, producing noticeable choppiness and stutters during gameplay and making for an overall unplayable experience. The GTX 1060, for comparison, sits at 82FPS AVG and 56.7FPS 0.1% low, but is obviously a more expensive card than the RX 470.ġ440p posts similar results, with the RX 470 struggling to sustain a playable framerate. The GTX 960 SSC runs slightly faster 0.1% lows, but an overall lower average. Still, both cards have issues with low 0.1% frametimes, landing around 30FPS. Against the RX 480 8GB Reference, there's a difference of nearly 13%. Mirror's Edge Catalyst at 1080p Ultra has the RX 470 exceeding 60FPS AVG, delivering on AMD's marketing claims, with a 65.3FPS AVG. Mirror's Edge Catalyst Benchmark on RX 470 vs.
Just for point of reference, the RX 470 was pushing 53.7FPS AVG at 1440p – more-or-less playable in GTA V – though its 0.1% low metrics were at 31FPS, and 36.3FPS for the 1% lows. The 390X will need to be retested once the newest drivers go public, as it was still exhibiting stutters that dragged down the average. The GTX 970 SSC also places ahead of the RX 470 at 89FPS AVG. The GTX 1060 FE runs at 95FPS average, a percent difference of 20.9% with the RX 470. Low framerates are acceptable between both cards now that AMD has resolved GTA stuttering with its driver updates. The RX 480 ($240) runs at 85FPS AVG for the 8GB model, or a difference of 10.2%. GTA V performs at 77FPS AVG on the RX 470 when run at 1080p with Very High and Ultra settings – effectively maxing out the graphics tab.