Comrade_ 1 Posted February 10, 2014 (edited) I've wen't from a GTX 570SC, in which on generally all low/disabled settings getting around 30 fps in say, Electro, to now a GTX 670 FTW 4GB version with literally the same frames. Why? The game isn't demanding anything of my card, which is odd. Under EVGA precision, you can see the power % being used. This game with the 670, and I'd assume the same for the other versions, is using around 25-39 % of power. What results is a low clock and terrible frames in games. I can only assume there is no way around this and that this is a DayZ internal thing. Other games, BF4 ect. use the correct allocated power %, I get to 1150 on my core clock, so I know it's not just me. Can anyone else with a 600 series card give some input? Specs below:~~~~~~~~~~~~~i7 4770 @ 4.0ghz8GB DDR3 GTX 670 FTW 4GBSamsung 128 GB SSD Edited February 10, 2014 by commie Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
djporternz 644 Posted February 10, 2014 (edited) DayZ is more closely tied to CPU performance than GPU, hence the lack of an increase with the upgrade of your graphics card. There is no way around this ATM and I'd go as far as saying that there probably won't be until there is a major fundamental change within the RV engine. TBH, those terrible frames in game are the best you're going to get. Remember this isn't a FPS engine at its core, and so was never intended to return the top end figures for frames. The reason the RV engines are more suited to games like DayZ and the ArmA series in general, is the CPU intensive 'per frame' computations that are happening behind the scenes. I would like to see a complete reworking of the RV engines from the ground up with provision to really push the power that is available in the modern PC, but that's a project that would take considerable time and effort to get right. BI aren't one of the big boys in the industry and may not presently have the resources to undertake such a journey. ON TOPIC: I've only got a 560 Ti and am getting between 17~25 FPS in major towns, but I'm also using a late model AMD CPU, so YMMV. Edited February 10, 2014 by DJPorterNZ Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Comrade_ 1 Posted February 10, 2014 DayZ is more closely tied to CPU performance than GPU, hence the lack of an increase with the upgrade of your graphics card. There is no way around this ATM and I'd go as far as saying that there probably won't be until there is a major fundamental change within the RV engine. TBH, those terrible frames in game are the best you're going to get. Remember this isn't a FPS engine at its core, and so was never intended to return the top end figures for frames. The reason the RV engines are more suited to games like DayZ and the ArmA series in general, is the CPU intensive 'per frame' computations that are happening behind the scenes. I would like to see a complete reworking of the RV engines from the ground up with provision to really push the power that is available in the modern PC, but that's a project that would take considerable time and effort to get right. BI aren't one of the big boys in the industry and may not presently have the resources to undertake such a journey. ON TOPIC: I've only got a 560 Ti and am getting between 17~25 FPS in major towns, but I'm also using a late model AMD CPU, so YMMV.I semi-agree, but I've already looked at those with similar systems. Those on the 700 series are getting a larger power % with their cards, and they're getting higher frames. I'm talking high settings and getting 60+ FPS. There is undoubtedly an issue with this game and 600 series. Having a 560 and 570 and myself now with a 670 shouldn't be getting equal frames. Arma 3 does better as well, so while I agree in some aspect about the engine and CPU driven, I think there is something else at work here. I'm using a latest gen haswell so I should be fine on that end. The power % the card is getting for the game is what is killing me curerntly. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
kuma8877 39 Posted February 10, 2014 (edited) You may want to go for the higher texture settings, this should get the engine to offload some of the work from the CPU to the GPU. It's kind of a backwards engine that way... push the graphics harder and you may see better frame rates. Have you done the .cfg tweaks? I5 750gtx660sc16g ddr3 Edited February 10, 2014 by kuma8877 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
nik21 287 Posted February 10, 2014 You could get a GTX 780 Ti and see no differnece in frames, simply because the scene is not limited by the GPU. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Comrade_ 1 Posted February 10, 2014 You may want to go for the higher texture settings, this should get the engine to offload some of the work from the CPU to the GPU. It's kind of a backwards engine that way... push the graphics harder and you may see better frame rates. Have you done the .cfg tweaks? I5 750gtx660sc16g ddr3 Haven't tried any .cfg tweaks. Are there specific ones you are referring to? I'll try to increase the texture setting to see if that helps. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites