Every article tag can be clicked to get a list of all articles in that category. Every article tag also has an RSS feed! You can customize an RSS feed too!
We do often include affiliate links to earn us some pennies. See more here.

GTX 760 Vs R7 370 4G In Company Of Heroes 2

By - | Views: 21,111
TheBoss has done his initial port reports and such so it's my turn to feed you some information. I'm once again putting my GTX 760 against the R7 370 to see what kind of performance we can expect from Company of Heroes 2.

Let's start with the Nvidia results since Nvidia is officially supported and Feral recommends 760 or higher for Company of Heroes 2. The game doesn't have setting presets so I tested on three different setting combinations: one with everything on minimum, one where settings were on medium and one where everything was maxed out. Anti-aliasing was disabled in all three test cases. Keep in mind that the performance test is a stress test meant to demonstrate the worst case scenario. Normally the game will run better than it does in these tests.

The testing was conducted on the same system with Intel i5-2500k clocked at 3.3 GHZ and 8GB of RAM.

image

The results look quite reasonable considering Liam's benchmarking on his 970. Average framerates stay above 30 though the game doesn't reach a stable 60 FPS ever. It might quickly touch the 60 FPS line but it will quickly go back to around the averages. For an RTS framerates like these are fairly reasonable but they are neither mind-blowing nor something to brag about.

Let's move on to the other contender of this fine duel: the R7 370 with 4GB of VRAM. It's worth noting that Feral doesn't officially support AMD GPUs for Company of Heroes 2 and the game will even have a pop up telling you so. I tried using the Catalyst 15.7 driver but it's been broken for my distribution (Xubuntu 15.04) for a while now and I couldn't utilize it. 15.3 worked but proved to work very poorly. The performance was unplayable levels of bad and it even crashed my OS when I attempted to play the campaign. Thus I was left with the RadeonSI driver. Surprisingly enough, RadeonSI was nearly 2x faster than Catalyst in the performance test. Testing was done with the latest Mesa drivers from the Oibaf repository.

image

So there are the results from the R7 370 with RadeonSI. You don't need to be a genius to see that something is very wrong here. I'm also feeling a slight déjà vu…

image

Yeah, like I thought. Just like with Shadow of Mordor on AMD, the performance drop-off is very minimal but the performance itself is quite poor. The game reaches a maximum of 30 FPS but most of the time it runs worse than that. Averages are quite horrifying to look at with them being around 20 FPS. However, like I already mentioned, the game does run better in the campaign. There I was able to maintain a playable 30 FPS or thereabouts most of the time. That is, until the game froze and locked up. On Nvidia side the game is quite robust and stable but the AMD side saw crashes nearly constantly. The game simply locks up and will have to be forced to close. On Catalyst similar things happened but there instead of just the game locking up, my whole system froze.

It seems that Feral's latest port is once again quite exclusive to the Nvidia-using population of Linux gamers. Intel Iris Pro is mentioned as the minimum on the Steam store page but I doubt that setup would run this game at a reasonable speed. Unless something drastic has happened, an Iris Pro is slower than my R7 370 and both are running on Mesa, though they do have their differences. I was hoping that Iris Pro being there would mean wider Mesa-compatibility but that doesn't seem to be the case. Well, maybe the next port will work better. For now I recommend the AMD users to look elsewhere for their entertainment. Nvidia people are better off but the game could still be too cinematic for those that demand constant 60 FPS output. Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
Tags: Benchmark
0 Likes
About the author -
author picture
I'm a Linux gamer from Finland. I like reading, long walks on the beach, dying repeatedly in roguelikes and ripping and tearing in FPS games. I also sometimes write code and sometimes that includes hobbyist game development.
See more from me
The comments on this article are closed.
23 comments
Page: «3/3
  Go to:

dubigrasu Aug 29, 2015
Quoting: MaelraneView video on youtube.com

Spoiler, click me
Nvidia has also been the single worst company I have ever dealt with! :p
Truth be told, that was in 2012, in 2014 changed his mind:
https://plus.google.com/+LinusTorvalds/posts/TQDXxxr6ixm
Maelrane Aug 29, 2015
Quoting: psychodriverI will support the underdog if they're doing a bare minimum to deserve that support. Right now (and for a while) AMD is falling below that bare minimum.

I can accept that this is the case for you (and for many). For me it's not. I cannot and will not use a binary blob for such an important component as a GPU.

If nvidia would go open source I would re-evaluate my stance, but until then it's AMD all the way. I personally am a developer first and then a gamer and I cannot waste countless hours trying to figure out the quirks of proprietary software, it's simply not what I'm paid for.

Apart from that I do not want to support an immoral company such as nvidia (3,5 = 4 anyone?). If that means I cannot play some AAA-games (of which most I'm not even remotely interested), then fine.

What I cannot stand is all the bullshit regarding blaming only AMD.

In this case I point my finger at feral and say: "You never even cared for the OpenGL standard and just tested it on nvidia hardware and their quirks"
Stebs Nov 24, 2015
Quoting: GuestOpenGL does not have a test suite or any kind of verification process to work through - not an official one like with D3D. This makes it harder to have one "proper" way of doing things (arguably a pro and a con), which is a knock-on effect for both driver development and application programming.
That is not true, Khronos has a conformance testing program, starting with OpenGL 4.4
While you're here, please consider supporting GamingOnLinux on:

Reward Tiers: Patreon. Plain Donations: PayPal.

This ensures all of our main content remains totally free for everyone! Patreon supporters can also remove all adverts and sponsors! Supporting us helps bring good, fresh content. Without your continued support, we simply could not continue!

You can find even more ways to support us on this dedicated page any time. If you already are, thank you!
The comments on this article are closed.