Futuremark VRMark Download v1.3.2020




You can now download Futuremark VRMark, the virtual reality benchmark from the developers of 3DMark.
The performance requirements for VR games are much higher than for typical PC games. So if you're thinking about buying an HTC Vive or an Oculus Rift this holiday, wouldn't it be good to know that your PC is ready for VR? VRMark includes two VR benchmark tests that run on your monitor, no headset required. At the end of each test, you'll see whether your PC is VR-ready, and if not, how far it falls short.
Orange Room benchmark
The VRMark Orange Room benchmark shows the impressive level of detail that can be achieved on a PC that meets the recommended hardware requirements for the HTC Vive and Oculus Rift. If your PC passes this test, it's ready for the two most popular VR systems available today.
Blue Room benchmark
The VRMark Blue Room benchmark is a more demanding test with a greater level of detail. It is the ideal benchmark for comparing high-end systems with specs above the recommended requirements for the HTC Vive and Oculus Rift. A PC that passes this test will be able to run the latest VR games at the highest settings, and may even be VR-ready for the next generation of VR headsets.
Results and reporting
After running a benchmark, you'll see clearly whether your PC is VR-ready or not. To pass, your PC has to meet or exceed the target frame rate without dropping frames. You also get an overall score, which you can use to compare systems.
Hardware monitoring charts show how your PC performed frame-by-frame. There are charts for frame rate, GPU frequency, GPU load, and GPU temperature.
Experience mode
VR headsets use clever techniques to compensate for missed frames. With Experience mode, you can judge the quality of the VR experience with your own eyes. VRMark Experience mode features free movement, spatial audio, and an interactive flashlight for lighting up the details of the scene. Explore each scene in your own time in VR or on your monitor.
- See if your PC meets the performance requirements for HTC Vive and Oculus Rift
- Test your system's VR readiness with the Orange Room benchmark
- Explore the Orange Room in Experience mode
- Unlock the Blue Room benchmark for high-performance PCs
- See detailed results and hardware monitoring charts
- Explore both rooms in Experience mode
- Make tests more or less demanding with custom settings.
- Licensed for business and commercial use
- Script and run tests from the Command Line
Change Info:
This is a minor update. Benchmark scores are not affected. Improved • Improved presentation of AMD Ryzen specifications on the Results screen. • Improved update notification system. • Text, logos, links, and file paths updated to reflect new company branding.
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Senior Member
Posts: 20790
Joined: 2008-08-28
Then it means to disable it in the video card options "NVCP".
My score on this **** amd pc..
You are barely getting 1k higher score than me with a gtx1060. Ah, that sweet bottleneck.

Member
Posts: 68
Joined: 2016-08-04
My laptop:
Orange
3dmark.com/vrpor/11238
Blue
3dmark.com/vrpbr/6974
Senior Member
Posts: 2143
Joined: 2007-01-16
Remember folks, this is a combined test, it's testing your cpu as well as your gpu!

Senior Member
Posts: 20790
Joined: 2008-08-28
That explains some of the anomalies in scores.
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Senior Member
Posts: 856
Joined: 2011-12-06
Just got a CV1 yesterday, will be picking up the Oculus Touch in December, was gonna go with the Vive but all the reviews seem to favour the Oculus as the better HMD, Vive is cool but that's mainly down to the controllers once Touch comes out I think the Rift will be the better choice,
that being said I need to try this benchmark out but so far I've had no issues with my 980 in any of the games I've played.
Update here's me score