MSI GeForce GTX 480 Lightning review

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VGA performance: Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 (DX9)

Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2

Modern Warfare 2 is set five years on from COD4 and brings a new villain into town: Vladimir Makarov. All the trouble start when Makarov frames the US for a terrorist attack on a Russian airport (yes, the infamous airport level). The rest of the story follows the same intertwined British and US mission format as before, and the missions are all incredible set-pieces that involve storming oil rigs, climbing icy cliffs and, of course, an adrenaline packed snowmobile chase. Visually the 3D engine seems to be the same as the COD4 one, it's tweaked and nearly abused to push out the very best of its capability. The result is a very decent looking game really, smoke, fog, sun, vegetation detailed texturing of objects, buildings and characters. 

Our image quality settings selected are the most complex you can set in-game. 4x AA, maxed out anisotropic filtering, the best textures, everything is enabled to its maximum capability. Any decent graphics card can run the game, it's that simple. There's no need to give in to lower quality settings.

Image Quality setting:

  • Level Contingency
  • 4x Anti-Aliasing
  • 16x Anisotropic Filtering
  • All settings maxed out

What are you looking at?  Above is a chart with generic baseline performance. For scaling reasons we included the new mid-range Radeon HD 6870 which simply offers kickass performance for money, (light blue), then of course the reference GTX 480 at default clock frequencies. And lastly the MSI GeForce GTX 480 Lightning with the factory overclocked core and memory frequencies.

As you can see, all cards can play this game with 4xAA up-to a monitor resolution of 2560x1600 perfectly fine. And that's with every possible in-game quality setting maxed out for the best image quality.

Anything after 60 FPS by the way is overkill as your monitor very likely can't refresh faster anyways. However we measure GPU performance here and not the limitations of your monitor. And 120Hz CRT/LCD monitors are an exception of course.

And as you are used to, a performance chart that was recently introduced in all our graphics card reviews. We stated this before, but once the GTX 400 series is clocked faster than reference, up-to a certain threshold, they just scale really well.

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