NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560 TI 448 Core Video Card Review

By

H.A.W.X. 2

Tom Clancy's HAWX 2

Aerial warfare has evolved. So have you. As a member of the ultra-secret H.A.W.X. 2 squadron, you are one of the chosen few, one of the truly elite. You will use finely honed reflexes, bleeding-edge technology and ultra-sophisticated aircraft – their existence denied by many governments – to dominate the skies. You will do so by mastering every nuance of the world’s finest combat aircraft. You will slip into enemy territory undetected, deliver a crippling blow and escape before he can summon a response. You will use your superior technology to decimate the enemy from afar, then draw him in close for a pulse-pounding dogfight. And you will use your steel nerve to successfully execute night raids, aerial refueling and more. You will do all this with professionalism, skill and consummate lethality. Because you are a member of H.A.W.X. 2 and you are one of the finest military aviators the world has ever known. H.A.W.X. 2 was released on November 16, 2010 for PC gamers.

Tom Clancy's HAWX 2

We ran the benchmark in DX11 mode with the image quality settings cranked up as you can see above.

Tom Clancy's HAWX 2

The H.A.W.X. 2 PC game title runs on what looks like seven threads as you can see from the task
manager shot seen above that was taken on the test system that was running
the Intel Core i7-3960X processor.

Tom Clancy's HAWX 2 Benchmark Results

Benchmark Results: H.A.W.X. 2 was run in DirectX 11 mode and it looks like the NVIDIA cards perform much better than the AMD Radeon HD 6950 that we used. The MSI N560GTX-448 Twin Frozr III Power Edition graphics card was trading blows with the NVIDIA GeForce GTX 570 and led a test by 1 FPS and lost the other by the same amount. We’d have to call this one a tie between these two cards, but notice how much faster the GeForce GTX560 Ti Core 448 is than the GeForce GTX560 Ti Core 384. Those 64 cores really make a significant difference.

Comments are closed.