AMD's Ian McNaughton blasts NVIDIA over PC Game Issues
Submitted by Dave Mincel on Tue, 09/29/2009 - 21:08.
AMD's very own self-proclaimed bad boy Ian McNaughton took a direct swing at NVIDIA and The Way it's Meant to be Played program today in a blog post that is worth taking a look at. Ian calls out some issues with several TWIMTBP titles, which is something you don't see being done everyday. If you already own or are thinking about getting Batman: Arkham Asylum, Need for Speed: Shift or Resident Evil 5 then you might want to see what Ian is upset about.

AMD prides itself on supporting open standards and our goal is to advance PC gaming regardless whether people purchase our products.
Unfortunately, not everyone shares our philosophy. Nvidia has recently sampled some newly released The Way it is Meant to be Played titles, including Batman: Arkham Asylum, to press in hopes that they would use these titles to benchmark against the HD Radeon 5870 and 5850. There are some known issues with these proprietary TWIMTBP titles.
Batman: Arkham Asylum
In this game, Nvidia has an in-game option for AA, whereas, gamers using ATI Graphics Cards are required to force AA on in the Catalyst Control Center.The advantage of in-game AA is that the engine can run AA selectively on scenes whereas Forced AA in CCC is required to use brute force to apply AA on every scene and object, requiring much more work.
Additionally, the in-game AA option was removed when ATI cards are detected. We were able to confirm this by changing the ids of ATI graphics cards in the Batman demo. By tricking the application, we were able to get in-game AA option where our performance was significantly enhanced. This option is not available for the retail game as there is a secure rom.
To fairly benchmark this application, please turn off all AA to assess the performance of the respective graphics cards. Also, we should point out that even at 2560×1600 with 4x AA and 8x AF we are still in the highly playable territory …
Need for Speed: Shift
In another TWIMTBP title, we submitted a list of issues that we discovered during the games’ development. These issues include inefficiencies in how the game engine worked with our hardware in addition to real bugs, etc.. We have sent this list to the developer for review. .Unfortunately you will be unable to get a fair playing experience with our hardware until the developer releases a patch to address and fix our reported issues.
Resident Evil 5
AMD was unable to receive builds of this game early enough to get a chance to test and address any open issues. We will work with the developer to test and adjust any compatibility or performance issues that we encounter..
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I agree entirely.
I favour NVIDIA over other graphics cards normally; I like the company and I like the quality of their product. Doing this, however, is definitely not playing fair. Why try to destroy the competition like that? It's like a film studio making all their films in 3D so that people with only one eye can't enjoy them.
lol nvidia's product
lol nvidia's product quality? With all of the bricked/RMAd 8x00 series cards?
Thats why I switched to AMD
This is the reason why I switched from Nvidia to AMD. Nvidia thinks they can control the market by giving samples so that they have an unfair advantage to AMD. I agree to everything Ian says and look forward to their new 5870 X2 when it comes out.
when are companys going to
when are companys going to grow up?
why every single day i read a article of one company ripping another for whatever reason.
when did companys become politicians?
weather its M$ ripping on sony, or sony ripping on M$, or M$ ripping on nintendo (that cheap shot at E3 a prime example)
or whatever.
why do companys wast their time and give themselves a bad name by acting like bloody 10 year olds.
what happened to the good old days where companys shut up and let their products do the talking.
seriously its starting to irk me the professionalism of companys today.
why cant they say our product is better because it does this this and this,in stead of flaming their competition for some ridiculous reason.
Kettle One!
"AMD prides itself on supporting open standards ..."
hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
ATI, I dub thee kettle. But please, carry on calling Nvidia black.
That is a dirty trick that
That is a dirty trick that Nvidia is playing. I can see why people are upset. It sort of reminds me of video game consoles getting exclusive rights to a video games.
With that said, I hate AMD/ATI's drivers and at least with Linux I'll only buy Nvidia.
To be fair I wish hardware companies would just focus on hardware. (I'm dreaming)
Nvidia responds to AMD's accusations
UPDATE: Nvidia responded to AMD's accusation about them disabling AA in Batman. http://www.gizmogamer.com/content/nvidias-developer-relations-team-issue...
AA = Anti-aliasing
To help the non-geek community out, AA stands for Anti-aliasing. Here is the definition:
Anti-Aliasing is a method of fooling the eye that a jagged edge is really smooth. Anti-Aliasing is often referred in games and on graphics cards. In games especially the chance to smooth edges of the images goes a long way to creating a realistic 3D image on the screen. Remember though that Anti-Aliasing does not actually smooth any edges of images it merely fools the eye. Like a lot of things they are only designed to be good enough. If you can't tell the difference then that's fine.
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