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Fable Legends DirectX 12 benchmarks show the future of PC gaming

Fable Legends DirectX 12 benchmark
For PC gamers, DirectX 12 is quite exciting. It promises to make PC games look even better than they already do, and now we’re seeing the graphics really put to the test with benchmarks being released by TechReport for Fable Legends using DirectX 12. DX 12 promises to improve the way modern PC games talk to GPUs, and it definitely appears to be working as promised based on the video above.
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In the test, a wide range of DirectX 12 compatible graphics cards were used. The models were as follows: Sapphire Nitro R7 370, MSI Radeon R9 285, XFX Radeon R9 390, Asus Strix R9 390X, Radeon R9 Nano, Asus Strix R9 Fury, Radeon R9 Fury X, Gigabyte GTX 950, MSI GeForce GTX 960, MSI GeForce GTX 970, Gigabyte GTX 980, and Asus Strix GTX 980 Ti. The system also featured a Core i7-5960X processor, 16GB DDR4 RAM, a Kingston SSDNow 310 drive, and of course, Windows 10 for access to DirectX 12. Clearly, this is a high-end system, which is necessary for pushing the visuals.

Some takeaways from the test include a complete lack of shimmer, crawling, and sparkle on any of the objects in the game. This creates a smoother, more realistic-looking world, even though it uses a more whimsical art style and not exactly photorealistic visuals. There’s also not a huge difference in performance between AMD and NVIDIA cards, even though the game supports asynchronous compute shaders, which have been shown to perform better on AMD cards, at least for the time being. At Ultra settings in 4K, the GeForce GTX 980 Ti is the top performer and the only card able to stay at a smooth 30fps.

It’s important to note that Fable Legends isn’t actually at the limit of what can be done with DX 12, as the game was in development before it existed, and it features full support for the older DX 11. Microsoft made a statement on what parts of DX 12 developer Lionhead is using:

“Lionhead Studios has made several additions to the engine to implement advanced visual effects, and has made use of several new DirectX 12 features, such as Async Compute, manual Resource Barrier tracking, and explicit memory management to help the game achieve the best possible performance.”

This means it is only using part of what DirectX 12 can do, and it’s already showing positive results in these early benchmark tests. It will be interesting to see exactly how DirectX 12 games look when developed with the API available from the beginning of the development cycle.

Dave LeClair
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Dave LeClair has been writing about tech and gaming since 2007. He's covered events, hosted podcasts, created videos, and…
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