GIGABYTE GA-X99-Gaming G1 WiFi Motherboard Review

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Tomb Raider

Tomb Raider

On March 5th, 2013 Square Enix released Tomb Raider, billed as a reboot of the franchise. In Tomb Raider, the player is confronted with a much younger Lara Croft who is shipwrecked and finds herself stranded on a mysterious island rife with danger, both natural and human. In contrast to the earlier games Croft is portrayed as vulnerable, acting out of necessity, desperation and sheer survival rather than for a greater cause or personal gain.

Tomb Raider Settings

The game has been built on Crystal Dynamics’s game engine called the “Crystal Engine” and the graphics look fantastic. AMD and Crystal Dyanmic’s worked on a new technology called TressFX Hair, which AMD describes as the worlds first in-game implementation of a real-time, per-strand hair physics system for this game title. We set the image quality to ultimate for benchmarking, but we disabled TressFX Hair under the advanced tab to be fair to NVIDIA graphics cards that don’t support the feature.

Tomb Raider Benchmark Results

Benchmark Results: Running the systems with the ‘Ultra Image Quality’ settings there is very little performance difference between the GIGABYTE X99-Gaming G1 WiFi and our other systems. The X99-Gaming G1 WiFi averaged 84.10 frames per second at 1920-1080 and 114.13 frames per second at 1280×1024. This is right on par with all of our other systems.

Tomb Raider Benchmark Results

Benchmark Results: In Tomb Raider running the low image quality settings, the GIGABYTE X99-Gaming G1 WiFi averaged 222.8 frames per second at 1920×1080 and 324.07 frames per second at 1280×1024.