The First DirectX 11 Games

With any launch of a new DirectX generation of hardware, software availability becomes a concern. As the hardware needs to come before the software so that developers can tailor their games’ performance, it’s just not possible to immediately launch with games ready to go. For the launch of DirectX 11 and the 5800 series, AMD gave us a list of what games to expect and when.

First out of the gate is Battleforge, EA’s card-based online-only RTS. We had initially been told that it would miss the 5870 launch, but in fact EA and AMD managed to get it in under the wire and deliver it a day early. This gives AMD the legitimate claim of having a DX11 title out there that only their new hardware can fully exploit, and from a press perspective it’s nice to have something out there we can test besides tech demos. Unfortunately we wrapped up our testing 2 days early in order to attend IDF, which means we have not yet had a chance to benchmark this title’s DX11 mode or look at it in-depth.

We did have a chance to see the title in action quickly at AMD’s press event 2 weeks ago, where AMD was using it to show off High Definition Ambient Occlusion. As far as we can tell, HDAO is the only DX11 wonder-feature that it current implements, which makes sense given that it should be the easiest to patch in.

The next big title in AMD’s stack of DX11 games is STALKER: Call of Pripyat. This game went gold in Russia earlier this week, with the English version some time behind it. Unfortunately we don’t know what DX11 features it will be using, but as STALKER games have historically been hard on computers, it should prove to be an interesting test case for DX11 performance.

DIRT 2 is a title that got a great deal of promotion at AMD’s press event. AMD has been using it to show off their 6-way Eyefinity configuration, and we had a chance to play it quickly in their testing labs when looking at Eyefinity. This should be a fuller-featured DX11 game, utilizing tessellation, better shadow filtering, and other DX11 features. Certainly it’s the closest thing AMD’s going to have for a showcase title this year for the DX11 features of their hardware, and the console version has been scoring well in reviews. The PC version is due December 11th.

Finally, AMD had Rebellion Games in house to show off an early version of Aliens vs. Predator. This was certainly the most impressive title shown, with Rebellion showing off tessellation and HDAO in real time. Unfortunately screenshots don’t really do the game justice here; the difference from using DX11 is far more noticeable in motion. At any rate, this game is the farthest out – it won’t ship until Q1 of next year at the earliest.

DirectX11 Redux DirectCompute, OpenCL, and the Future of CAL
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  • RubberJohnny - Thursday, September 24, 2009 - link

    Well silicondoc you sure have some hatred for ATI/love for nvidia.

    It's almost as if you work for the green team...

    You seem to have all this time on your hands to go around the net looking for links to spread FUD...sitting on new egg watching these cards come in and out of stock like you have a vested interest in seeing ATI fail...unlike any sane person it appears you want nvidia to have a monopoly on the industry?

    Maybe you are privy to some inside info over at nvidia and know they have nothing to counter the 5870 with?

    Maybe the cash they paid you to spin these BS comments would have been better spent on R&D?
  • SiliconDoc - Thursday, September 24, 2009 - link

    That's a nice personal, grating, insulting ripppp, it's almost funny, too.
    ---
    The real problems remain.
    I bring up this stuff because of course, no one else will, it is almost forbidden. Telling the truth shouldn't be that hard, and calling it fairly and honestly should not be such a burden.
    I will gladly take correction when one of you noticing insulters has any to offer. Of course, that never comes.
    Break some new ground, won't you ?
    I don't think you will, nor do I think anyone else will - once again, that simply confirms my factual points.
    I guess I'll give you a point for complaining about delivery, if that's what you were doing, but frankly, there are a lot of complainers here no different - let's take for instance the ATI Radeon HD 4890 vs. NVIDIA GeForce GTX 275 article here.
    http://www.anandtech.com/video/showdoc.aspx?i=3539">http://www.anandtech.com/video/showdoc.aspx?i=3539
    Boy, the red fans went into rip mode, and Anand came in and changed the articles (Derek's) words and hence "result", from GTX275 wins to ATI4890 wins.
    --
    No, it's not just me, it's just the bias here consistently leans to ati, and wether it's rooting for the underdog that causes it, or the brooding undercurrent hatred that surfaces for "the bigshot" "greedy" "ripoff artist" "nvidia overchargers" "industry controlling and bribing" "profit demon" Nvidia, who knows...
    I'm just not afraid to point it out, since it's so sickening, yes, probably just to me, "I'm sure".
    How about this glaring one I have never pointed out even to this day, but will now:
    ATI is ALWAYS listed first, or "on top" - and of course, NVIDIA, second, and it is no doubt, in the "reviewer's minds" because of "the alphabet", and "here we go in alphabetical order".
    A very, very convenient excuse, that quite easily causes a perception bias, that is quite marked for the readers.
    But, that's ok.
    ---
    So, you want to tell me why I shouldn't laugh out loud when ATI uses NVIDIA cards to develope their "PhysX" competition Bullet ?
    ROFLMAO
    I have heard 100 times here (from guess whom) that the ati has the wanted "new technology", so will that same refrain come when NVIDIA introduces their never before done MIMD capable cores in a few months ? LOL
    I can hardly wait to see the "new technology" wannabes proclaiming their switched fealty.
    Gee sorry for noticing such things, I guess I should be a mind numbed zombie babbling along with the PC required fanning for ati ?
  • silverblue - Thursday, September 24, 2009 - link

    No; if he did work for nVidia, he'd be far better informed and far less prone to using the phrase "red rooster" every five seconds.
  • crackshot91 - Wednesday, September 23, 2009 - link

    Any possibility of benchmarks with a core 2 duo?

    I wanna know if it will be necessary to upgrade to an i5 or i7 (All new mobo) to see big performance gains over my 8800GT. Will a C2D E6750 @ 3.2GHz bottleneck it?
  • Ryan Smith - Wednesday, September 23, 2009 - link

    Our recent Core i7 860 article should do an adequate job of answering that question. Several of the benchmarks were taken right out of this article.
  • therealnickdanger - Wednesday, September 23, 2009 - link

    You dedicated a full page to the flawless performance of its A/V output, but didn't mention it in the "features" part of the conclusion. It's a very powerful feature, IMO. Granted, this card may be a tad too hot and loud to find a home in a lot of HTPCs, but it's still an awesome feature and you should probably append your conclusion... just a suggestion though.

    Ultimately, I have to admit to being a little disappointed by the performance of this card. All the Eyefinity hype and playable framerates at massive 7000x3000 resolutions led me to believe that this single card would scale down and simply dominate everything at the 30" level and below. It just seems logical, so I was taken aback when it was beat by, well, anything else. I expected the 5870 and 5870CF to be at the top of every chart. Oh well.

    Awesome article though! I'm sure there's a 5850 in my future!
  • MrMom - Wednesday, September 23, 2009 - link

    Does anyone have a good explanation why the massive HD5870 is still slower/@par with the GTX295?

    Thanks
  • SiliconDoc - Thursday, September 24, 2009 - link

    Yes, because the ati core "really sucks". It needs DDR5, and much higher MHZ to compete with Nvidia, and their what, over 1 year old core. LOL Even their own 4870x2.
    Or the 3 year old G92 vs the ddr3 "4850" the "topcore" before yesterday. (the ati topcore minus the well done 3m mhz+ REBRAND ring around the 4890)
    That's the sad, actual truth. That's the truth many cannot bear to bring themselves to realize, and it's going to get WORSE for them very soon, with nvidia's next release, with ddr5, a 512 bit bus, and the NEW TECHNOLOGY BY NVIDIA THAT ATI DOES NOT HAVE MIMD capable cores.
    Oh, I can hardly wait, but you bet I'm going to wait, you can count on that 100%.

  • Spoelie - Thursday, September 24, 2009 - link

    because those are 2 480mm² dies, while this is only 1 360mm² die?
  • Griswold - Wednesday, September 23, 2009 - link

    Its one GPU instead of two, maybe?

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