Guru3D.com
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • Channels
    • Archive
  • DOWNLOADS
    • New Downloads
    • Categories
    • Archive
  • GAME REVIEWS
  • ARTICLES
    • Rig of the Month
    • Join ROTM
    • PC Buyers Guide
    • Guru3D VGA Charts
    • Editorials
    • Dated content
  • HARDWARE REVIEWS
    • Videocards
    • Processors
    • Audio
    • Motherboards
    • Memory and Flash
    • SSD Storage
    • Chassis
    • Media Players
    • Power Supply
    • Laptop and Mobile
    • Smartphone
    • Networking
    • Keyboard Mouse
    • Cooling
    • Search articles
    • Knowledgebase
    • More Categories
  • FORUMS
  • NEWSLETTER
  • CONTACT

New Reviews
Fractal Design Pop Air RGB Black TG review
Palit GeForce GTX 1630 4GB Dual review
FSP Dagger Pro (850W PSU) review
Razer Leviathan V2 gaming soundbar review
Guru3D NVMe Thermal Test - the heatsink vs. performance
EnGenius ECW220S 2x2 Cloud Access Point review
Alphacool Eisbaer Aurora HPE 360 LCS cooler review
Noctua NH-D12L CPU Cooler Review
Silicon Power XPOWER XS70 1TB NVMe SSD Review
Hyte Y60 chassis review

New Downloads
Intel ARC graphics Driver Download Version: 30.0.101.1743
AMD Radeon Software Adrenalin 22.6.1 WHQL driver download
GeForce 516.59 WHQL driver download
Media Player Classic - Home Cinema v1.9.22 Download
AMD Chipset Drivers Download v4.06.10.651
CrystalDiskInfo 8.17 Download
AMD Radeon Software Adrenalin 22.6.1 Windows 7 driver download
ReShade download v5.2.2
HWiNFO Download v7.26
7-Zip v22.00 Download


New Forum Topics
Display Driver Uninstaller Thread FSR Thread Foundry TSMC states prices of graphics cards and processors will increase by 9% Is 2090 gpu core a good O.C for a 3080ti? NVIDIA GeForce 516.59 WHQL driver download & Discussion Windows 11 Release Build AMD Radeon Software Adrenalin 22.6.1 - Driver download and discussion AMD falls victim of the RansomHouse Extortion Group - 56GB of data stolen PlayStation 3 emulator increases its CPU performance by 30% with AVX-512 [3rd-Party Driver] Amernime Zone Radeon Insight 22.5.1 WHQL Driver Pack (Released)




Guru3D.com » Review » ATI Eyfinity review » Page 8

ATI Eyfinity review - Final Words & Conclusion

by Hilbert Hagedoorn on: 09/27/2009 02:00 PM [ ] 0 comment(s)

Tweet

 

The Verdict

I have to be totally honest here, I very much like Eyefinity and sure, I understand that an application like this is not valid or just too expensive for 99% of you guys, not to mention power consumption. But the brutal honesty is that if you stick to a three monitor setup with one monitor in the middle, the experience is grand.

You'll play your games much more immersive as you'll have so much screen resolution to work with. Especially for flight simulators , racing games and strategy games where you like to have a big field / area to play in it enhances visibility, and that's just really grand. The experience of playing games, in our case with three screens is simply put fantastic, the first minutes you'll feel a little confusion as your brain actually needs to process so much information it can hardly keep up. Once you get used to it (few minutes really) the 'wow' factor kicks in and the experience is just lovely.

What are the biggest downsides ?

Now I also have to state that Eyefinity is not ideal for any game out there. Sometimes titles can behave a little erratic and spread out the resolution a little weird (aspect ratio), other's simply do not work. Examples here are the New Resident Evil, which supports the resolutions, but then scans completely wrong so badly that you can't even exit the menus. It's stuff like this that you guys will deal with a lot for the time being as aspect ratios simply are not yet compatible with this technology. You'll end up editing around with game setup files and configurations.

But yeah, that's just the choice you make. Should a game not be supported (and that change is fairly moderate) you can always select one monitor at say 1920x1200 and game as you are used to play. The graphics driver will recognize this and you'll play at the middle screen.

Another downside, well, the Bezel of course, if it's fat and thick on your monitors it might annoy you a little. This is why you should go for three screens, it's less obvious with a monitor in the middle and then one to the left and right, just like in a car.

 But sure, the biggest challenge is that several games unfortunately do not support extraordinary resolutions. And that's something that ATI will need to push. But I'm confident that the new resolutions will be added in upcoming game patches, for the games that do not already support it out of the box of course.

  • Expensive ? Yes.
  • Overkill ? Yes.
  • Incredible fun ? Yes
  • Would I personally opt to go for a solution like this ? Yes.

I like it, I so very much do like it -- and everybody that I have shown this setup shares that opinion. So try to forget about power consumption of all the monitors and the sheer graphics power and money you need to drop on a setup like this and the sheer amount of desktop space you'll need :) And then you realize .. that this probably is something we all would like to own very much. When a game properly works, the gaming experience is wicked and beats anything out there.

So I need to recommend this technology with caution. Games will need the support the uber widescreen gaming resolutions and aspect ratios better, and you certainly need a bucket load of raw GPU rendering power to make this happen. But we feel the adaptation rate for game support will evolve fast. This is easy stuff to deal with for game developers. But we foresee a wide future for Eyefinity ... very wide.

  • If you like this article please digg it.
  • Leave/read comments on this product
  • Sign up to receive a notice when we publish a new article
  • Or go back to Guru3D's front page.

Update: initially we popped in two 5870 cards expecting that Crossfire would work. Unfortunately at the time of launch, Eyefinity will support only single-GPU configurations for gaming, but we are informed that CrossFire support will be coming some point in the near future. So all our results are based on single-GPU performance of a Radeon HD 5870.




8 pages « < 5 6 7 8



Related Articles
ATI Eyfinity review
With the release of Radeon series 5800 comes a new feature. It's called Eyefinity. Eyefinity in short is having the ability to connect multiple monitors to your graphics card and create an extreme native resolution. It allows you to setup two to six monitors, combine them and make one massive screen.

© 2022