Warcraft III: Frozen Throne Performance

These games both looked good running WC3, but we recommend using the OpenGL rendering path rather than the DirectX as its is faster and doesn't retard quality.



Graphics Media Accelerator 900



Radeon 9100 IGP


Again, though the ATI part falls in line behind the Intel, clock speed makes a big difference here.

Warcraft III: Frozen Throne

The jump from 2.8GHz again seems to make a larger difference than other 200MHz increases.

CPU Scaling: Warcraft 3

Unreal Tournament 2004 Performance Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory Performance
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  • skiboysteve - Monday, August 2, 2004 - link

    "Gee thats funny i thought Longhorn required DX10 and PS3 minimum."

    longhorn requires DX9
  • kmmatney - Monday, August 2, 2004 - link

    I can probably dig up the numbers somewhere, but I wonder how this compares to the NForce2 IGP paired with an Athlon XP. Is there an IGP for the Athlon64?
  • mczak - Monday, August 2, 2004 - link

    "...the ATI 9100 IGP numbers are based on a system running at a 600MHz lower processor frequency. Interestingly, this almost makes up for Intel's lack of hardware geometry processing."
    Well, the ATI 9100 IGP also completely lacks hardware geometry processing!
  • mkruer - Monday, August 2, 2004 - link

    Gee thats funny i thought Longhorn required DX10 and PS3 minimum. If tru the artical is a mute point . Intel is try to add value to the chipsete, when infact what is required is simplification of the chipset. Looks lke Blue Crystals to me
  • sprockkets - Monday, August 2, 2004 - link

    With such low memory bandwidth available maybe running a DX9 integrated video system is a complete waste of time. So what if it supports PS2.0, playing a game at around 10FPS is a waste of time.
  • mikecel79 - Monday, August 2, 2004 - link

    "So is this that Intel quality and 'reliability' that someone was talking about in the comments for the Sempron article? "

    Quality and reliability are different than performance. There's nothing here to show that the Intel Integrated graphics are not good quality or not reliable. Performance has nothing to do with quality or reliability.
  • tfranzese - Monday, August 2, 2004 - link

    So is this that Intel quality and 'reliability' that someone was talking about in the comments for the Sempron article?
  • cosmotic - Monday, August 2, 2004 - link

    I really like the Intel bashing comments at the end of the review. Intel DOES have the responibility of puting better graphics cards in these computers. If they didn't provide integrated graphics, OEMs would be required to use add-in cards, and since the cheapest add-in card performs better than Intels chip, there is NO reason at all for Intel to be providing such utter crap in their chipsets. It may even be more ecinomical to license nVidia's technology to use inside Intel chips. That would make everyone happy (except ATI).

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