Originally posted by: Gamingphreek
Originally posted by: Nextman916
The reason my frames have been the same in my eyes is because the settings im running my games at is fit for a 6600gt to run at, reason for that is because prefer higher frames......so regardless with a card that scores 3800 or 5600 you wouldnt really see a difference. And even you cant deny the fact that something had to have changed with my system to cause this loss in 3dmark....you dont just lose 1800 points any given day.
If you dropped that many points, i dont care how CPU limited you made your games, you would notice a difference.
-Kevin
Not quite. If he's running on settings that are meant for a 6600GT, it's going to be around the ballpark of 1024x768 with eye candy, 12x10(or 9) without.
Now, let's take this situation for example...
CS:Source - I've got a Leadtek GF 6200 that hits about 2700 3dmarks. At his "6600GT" settings, I'm getting an average of well over 60fps on nearly all maps (save for a few parts in dust2 that lag to death) @ 10x7 w/4xAF.
If his card was a 6800U at those settings, it would be getting a much higher amount of frames than me. Dropping down to a relative 3800 3dmarks card, he'd still be averaging more than me...say 75fps. He's not going to notice the difference between 75fps and whatever higher number he was getting previously. Maybe a few of you can. I wouldn't.
Anyway, that was just an example.
Besides, if his card was performing at a relative 3800 3dmarks, that'd be pretty close to spot on to what an actual 6600GT performs at, so in most of his games I'm really sure he wouldn't notice the difference if he was running them at settings meant for that sort of card.
OP: Go to your device manager. Under system devices, do you have both a PCI-PCI bridge and PCI-AGP bridge device installed? Or is it one PCI-PCI bridge, or even two PCI-PCI bridge devices installed?
Somehow when I was changing drivers once, I deleted my PCI-AGP bridge and it reinstalled as a generic PCI-PCI bridge. My gaming performance tanked by 33%.