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Vista Gaming Performance - tech|
| (hx) 11:25 PM CET - Jan,29 2007 |
TechGage
took a few popular games through the benchmarks on Windows Vista. How does
Microsoft's new operating system affect gaming performance? In some cases quite
a bit, in other cases not much at all. It looks like it's very dependant on what
game you are running. Here's an excerpt:
As with most articles of this nature, we can't fully give a conclusion
because so many factors come into play. Though as it stands, we can learn a lot
from this simple round of tests. First is the fact that Vista is not going to be
an OS for an ultimate gaming machine anytime soon. This is something that you
should consider before you throw a bunch of cash at a new computer and then pick
up Vista along with it.
The Vista NVIDIA drivers used during testing were just finalized the other day,
the result of a string of tireless days of bug smashing. Vista is not
necessarily a harder OS to develop for, but because coders need to learn the new
architecture, we can expect to wait a while before our PCs are "perfect". Even
with these "final" drivers, SLI is still inoperable and may not be for another
few weeks. Even at that time, nobody is going to know whether it's going to
equal the performance we currently see on XP. Even with my simple one card
testing, we can see there is a lot of work to be done, both with the drivers and
perhaps with games developers releasing updates that better support Vista.
So, I've said it before and will say it again. Vista is a good operating
system... but it's -far- from being even 90% reliable. When going from an XP
machine to Vista, it feels like you just went from a Toyota Celica to a Ferrari
599 GTB Fiorano. The only problem is, that it feels like your new Ferrari
borrowed your Celicas engine. We'll let the numbers speak for themselves.
In the end, if you are making the move to Vista and are a gamer, you may as well
prepare to partition your hard drive to dual boot. You are not going to want to
go through the hassle of making your games run smooth in Vista, or go through
the trouble of tweaking to make it happen. Hopefully within the next two months,
NVIDIAs drivers will be much more refined and -all- games should run as they do
on XP, or at least close to it. I regret not having an ATI card on hand to
perform testing there as well, but it may not be a far stretch to expect a
similar experience there.
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last 10 comments: | Smiley_ie | (12:20 PM CET - Jan,30 2007 ) | | Thats a fare drop overall, i think i'll geve it 8 - 12 months before i switch to vista. | |
| xxxx | (07:11 PM CET - Jan,30 2007 ) | IT'S THE "BLOAT" THAT CAUSES IT TO BE SLOWER.
It's what I've been saying since the start. There is way more consumed ram before loading up a game that causes it to be slower, re:gui, re:50 million services, tasks etc. I am dual booting Premium and XP. I plan to benchmark lots of games and then write a guide on how to turn all the Vista BS off. | |
| baal | (07:21 PM CET - Jan,30 2007 ) | it was the same with 98/ME -> XP.
people will get over it :D | |
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