But looking at those TechReport data,
You must have not looked at the review objectively or read the comments at TR. Other people have noted this too. I'll just restate some of those comments briefly. If you did, you would have noticed something that simply
cannot be true - GTX660Ti outperforming HD7950 in Skyrim in terms of frames per second at 2560x1440 with AA. A quick look at other reviews on the net shows that this is frankly impossible because HD7950 V2 not only faster than GTX670, but can beat 680 in Skyrim at high resolution and the performance gap is > 30% compared to GTX660Ti in this title at high resolution.
http://www.computerbase.de/artikel/grafikkarten/2012/test-amd-radeon-hd-7950-mit-925-mhz/19/
That's 6 reviews that all show HD7950 V2 smoking GTX660Ti in Skyrim at high resolution and I can find 20 more and none of them will show GTX660Ti achieving higher frames per second at 2560x1440 or 2560x1600 in Skyrim because it's one of those cases where GTX660Ti gets slaughtered. GTX660Ti simply
cannot beat HD7950 950mhz in actual
frames per second in Skyrim at 2560x1440 with AA, irrespective of smoothness discussion. Their review shows it garnered higher frames per second. :sneaky: At that point, you pretty much know that either there is a system wide hardware problem, or a Windows 8 driver problem, or a motherboard BIOS/chipset comparability issue with their Radeon cards. The rest of the review can no longer be taken seriously because of this result.
it kinda makes even more sense why H states SLI "feels" smoother than CFX.
This is not news. Out of the box SLI feels smoother than CF. If you test CF with Radeon Pro, what happens then? You have already been linked the Tom's hardware review where micro-stutter was eliminated effectively. 3rd party apps like MSI Afterburner, NV Inspector are fair game and so is Radeon Pro or its dynamic vsync feature.
Now it makes more sense when hearing people feel NV is smoother than AMD.
I went from 8800GTS to 4890 to GTX470 to HD6950 @ 6970 to HD7970. I felt no difference in micro-stutter. I did notice a huge improvement in frames per second in each case in certain games. My HD6950 OC crushed GTX470 @ 760mhz in Crysis/Warhead and F1 2010. If GTX470 felt smoother, I wouldn't have kept the 6950, instead I would have sold it and grabbed a GTX570 and I certainly wouldn't have gone with HD7970 if I felt NV cards were seriously smoother in single card configurations.
I am surprised NO ONE mentioned that in HardOCP's testing, the HD7970CF setup was providing higher image quality. For example, in Sleeping dogs, they were able to put AA+FXAA on high and enable SSAA to medium. GTX680 SLI could not render the game smoothly with those settings.
So on one hand, GTX680 felt "smoother" but it couldn't run the game at the same image quality? I see that GTX680 SLI had higher frames under the playability comparison:
And that's the point, if you level the playing field to apples vs. apples image quality, the HD7970CF crushes GTX680 SLI in performance:
If you want to improve smoothness, no problem, just get Radeon Pro!! You are getting 42% higher frames per second which means you have room to afford vsync here. You either end up with higher image quality than GTX680 SLI or higher performance, where you can use Radeon Pro to virtually eliminate micro-stutter. It's the same thing for all the other game tests they ran. HD7970 Ghz CF and 7970Ghz provided either more frames per second or higher image quality compared to GTX680 SLI or GTX680. It's not hard to imagine that GTX680 SLI would feel smoother in BF3 when it's doing 2xMSAA and HD7970 CF is subjected to 4xMSAA. So lower it to 2xMSAA and you get way higher frames on the 7970 CFX. The micro-stutter concerns can be easily fixed with Radeon Pro. You don't really have a good argument there.