There ya go.
See now that's just obvious trolling since you changed one of his statements to fit your replies. Be less obvious sometime?
Back to the original point:
If we take AT's benchmarks, some make sense, some don't.
Crysis: Warhead. Obvious, the most demanding game arguably.
5 DX11 games (Metro 2033, Civ 5, Stalker, Dirt 2, BF BC2) as well as 3 of them being popular games especially in their genres.
An Unreal Engine 3 game (ME2), being the most popular game engine.
An OpenGL game (Wolfenstein). The most recent OpenGL game on the major OGL engine (AFAIK?)
Then you have some which are outliers.
Battleforge DX10. As a DX11 test, it might make sense, as a DX11 test it doesn't really make sense.
HAWX. Again, doesn't make much sense, it has already been replaced by a DX11 sequel, HAWX2, which would make more sense for latest and greatest benchmarking. Both HAWX 1 and 2 seem to favour NV so in the grand scheme of things it doesn't make much difference. Possibly just there to represent another genre?
Xbitlabs has:
8 DX11 games
Crysis
Res Evil 5 (representing 3rd person shooter)
Far Cry (possibly not so useful these days, but still quite demanding)
Borderlands (Unreal Engine 3)
GTA 4 (big game, getting old now though)
Left 4 Dead 2 (Source representative)
Just Cause 2 (recent game, quite demanding)
Starcraft 2 (RTS, big game)
Mafia 2 ('big' game, quite demanding)
What other games would people like to see instead of FC2, Mafia 2 and Just Cause 2, which are the Xbitlabs outliers? (Bearing in mind DX11 games are pretty much all being tested).
Oh, and they are all NV games, and in Just Cause 2 and Mafia 2, AMD wins, and in FC2, AMD wins at 2560x1600 but loses at 1920x1200. So much for that bias.
I mean, if you are going to complain or talk about bias, you have to suggest what they should do instead.
Most sites try to cover a spectrum of games which is representative of the most demanding new games, and/or various different game engines, and feature sets (e.g. DX11). It's a sensible approach.
Hard for them to completely ignore games suggested by companies. If AMD says "bench Dirt 2/F1 2010" they are going to say "OK, we'll bench Dirt 2/F1 2010 because it's one of the handful of DX11 games on the market, and if we exclude it we're down a high percentage of DX11 games out there"