GeForce GTX 560 Ti vs Radeon HD 6950

GeForce GTX 560 Ti vs Radeon HD 6950
Our twin GPU setups take to their respective corners and prepare to face off

The change in the multi-GPU game over the last eighteen months or so has been dramatic. It's been a long time coming but the technology is finally coming of age, but there's now a real reason to be dropping a second card into your home system other than just bragging rights: straight performance.

When the technology first became available in our home gaming rigs though it was very different situation. With a combination of flaky driver support, dodgy hardware implementation and frankly shoddy performance, it was hard to recommend anyone part with the extra cash for the second card.

Nvidia

First things first

So if you want to have an SLI setup you really need to be thinking about that when you come to build the basics of your gaming rig in the first place. CrossFire is a lot more forgiving, but then being so far behind it really needs to be.

Heaven 2.0

Chances are that if you've got a relatively modern ATX board in your current rig you're already set up for an AMD-based solution. But since their inception both technologies have been little more than a luxury, and mostly found in high-end rigs from system integrators. That began to change though when AMD changed its GPU strategy.

With the ill-fated HD 3000 series it decided it could no longer compete at the high-end with its Nvidia rivals, deciding instead to opt for cheaper, volume GPUs. Its solution for the high-end though was to pair up two of its cheaper GPUs on a single PCB.

Now, it wasn't a great strategy right away. The shoddy and short-lived GeForce 7950 GX2 showed how messed up twin GPUs could be and the HD 3870 x2 was little different. The subsequent generations of AMD's multi-GPU single cards; the HD 4870 x2 and HD 5970, forced it to tighten up its CrossFire drivers to great success.

This multi-GPU competition also forced Nvidia to redress the diminishing returns of its own driver set to the point where we're now sometimes seeing double the performance from twin card setups from both companies.

AMD

It's also set to be the high-end battleground of this current generation of cards, with Nvidia's GeForce GTX 590 and AMD's Radeon HD 6990 stepping into the ring in the next couple of months for a real battle royale. With cheese.

But at this crazy high-end of graphics cards you're looking at £500+. Pick up a couple of £200ish mid-range cards though and you'll get almost the same level of performance. The GeForce GTX 560 Ti is Nvidia's latest mid-ranger and is the natural evolution from the frankly awesome GTX 460. Paired up this older card produces the same sort of performance as a GTX 580.

With this new GPU pairing though you're passing the GTX 580's performance in all our tests bar the system-crushing Metro 2033 and Crysis Warhead benchmarks.

Metro 2033

Our favourite card of the moment, the Radeon HD 6950, however, has a clean sweep in CrossFire compared to the single GeForce flagship card.

100 Per Cent Boost

The tessellation-heavy benchmarks of Heaven 2.0 and Metro 2033 are the most telling, offering numbers at the 2,560 x 1,600 resolution that we've never before seen. In some of the legacy benches though, particularly the Nvidia favouring DiRT 2, the twin GTX 560 Ti holds sway. But overall the somewhat pricier AMD twin-set wins out.

DiRT 2

As well as the performance benefits, including a 100 per cent boost in Heaven 2.0, the HD 6950 setup is also one that more people will have access to. SLI-certified boards are still fairly rare, high-end products, whereas most ATX boards will already have CrossFire capability as standard.

With this latest card and a more solid driver set AMD could well be cutting that 95 per cent Nvidia Steam favouritism down to size. CrossFire for the win, then. Who thought you'd hear anyone say that a year or so ago?