Reloading... Rage Against the AMD

by on Oct 06, 2011

AMD-ready or not, Rage has many gamers swarming across the Wasteland this week. Today's Ten Ton Hammer offers our first impressions and much more!

Welcome to our 90th attempt at Reloading...!



 I’m Jeff Woleslagle and I’ll be impersonating John Hoskin today. Starting with a quote and a YouTube video:



“Hardware works best when it matters the least.” – Norman Ralph Augustine



Everyone can use a feel good moment to start the day.   Let’s go with this…






id Software played a significant part in my gaming past and likely yours, directly or indirectly. Ah the memories, some going back to grade school.... hunched over a Tandy rubbing elbows with the neighbor girls blasting our way through Commander Keen, the junior high comp sci teacher looking the other way as we played Wolfenstein after school, and my first networked game experience: whiling away the summer of 1993 playing 2-player deathmatch Doom over a tragic 2400 baud connection. I never considered myself an id Software fanboy, they simply made the games that everyone played.



After a long lull, id is back with Rage, built on a brand new id Tech 5 engine. Given my history with their games, I snatched at the chance to review the game,and am about 11 glorious hours in. The old-school, no cover system gameplay, imaginatively conceived character models, gorgeous environments, vehicle combat, enemy AI, and RPG hooks are abundantly satisfying. I was expecting a high quality Mad Max-inspired shoot 'em up and got the collection, crafting, and story of a less retro-inspired Fallout and the vehicular multiplayer-capable mayhem of an Auto Assault or Twisted Metal thrown into the bargain.



But the full review comes tomorrow. And, despite my enjoying the game immensely, Rage has also been one of the most frustrating games to play and review in recent memory. From what I can tell, it's not even the fault of the game itself. It's the drivers, and specifically the ATI 11.9 drivers.



A lot of folks complain about texture pop-in, which is actually one of the features of the engine. The game manages your memory and processing resources carefully and loads as much of the game as your system can handle. If you can get past a slight blur in the environment when a new area is loaded, you're rewarded with a custom tailored graphics environment, smooth framerates (now that the graphics issues are resolved, I'm consistently pegged at 60 frames/sec on a mid-range system), and brief loading screens.


Rage's detailed environments are a treat. Almost everything you see is open for exploration.



That is, if you can stay in the game. Let me begin my rant by saying that I scrupulously did everything you're supposed to do prior to embarking on a game of this magnitude, to the point of uninstalling my graphics drivers, using Driver Sweeper to clean up the last vestiges, then installed the latest distribution of ATI's Catalyst Control suite. I defragged twice for good measure, and even carefully blew the dust out of my Radeon HD 5770 card last week to hopefully prevent heat issues. I thought I was ready.



I wasn't. My first experiences with the game offered paltry framerates in the low teens and frequent loading screen crashes, but due to the quality of the game experience I soldiered on. To its credit, crashes aside, the game was playable, even enjoyable. One "fix" on the Steam boards recommended the 11.10 preview drivers which, for me, improved framerate immensely, but didn't solve the crashing issue and created some nasty artifacts and UI flicker.



Fortunately, a day after launch, AMD released a Rage Performance Driver which, at first, didn't work for me until I repeated the entire uninstall -> Driver Sweeper -> multiple restart sequence. But this story has a happy ending; I'm now Raging across the wasteland without a graphical hiccup or crash.



You might say that my first mistake was going with AMD when a majority of devs use Nvidia to develop their games, and a few years ago I would have agreed. AMD-based cards (formerly ATI) used to be a hot mess. But a suprisingly candid interview (yet also a thoroughly unprintable interview, given my level of hardware knowledge and Ten Ton Hammer's content focus) interview at GDC 2011 convinced me that ATI is on the end-users side when it comes to the age-old battle between standards-based and proprietary hardward. Nvidia I'm less sure about. They still has the better marketing presence and the edge in 3D, but from my layman's perspective, AMD still wins on cost even if performance is about equal in the DirectX 11 environment.



Dogs vs. cats, macs vs. PCs.... what's your take on the age old battle between AMD / ATI and Nvidia?



As always, you can contact us a number of ways:

Email Twitter Google+ Website Telepathy (not available - Boomjack is currently out of signal range)

Until later,

Jeff "Ethec" Woleslagle

Hacking EverQuest Pt. 3 - SOE's Response

In the final part of our series Benjamin J. de la Durantaye talks to SOE to find out how they intend to put a stop to the hacking and cheating in EverQuest.

Rusty Hearts Review

Rusty Hearts is an action-packed throwback to games such as Golden Axe. This anime-style free online MMORPG features almost non-stop beatdowns of monsters and scrolling dungeon crawls.

RIFT: Travels Through Telara Pt. 4 - The Rift Opens

Join Guardian scribe, Padraic, and his trusty, yet slow-witted lackey Bran, as they travel the length and breadth of Telara documenting the people, places, history, and folklore of the world. Before it’s all gone.

FFXIV Update 1.19 Arrives, And So Does Ifrit

Square Enix has launched update 1.19 for Final Fantasy XIV and the latest update brings new content, lots of squashed bugs, several changes, a new event and a hot-tempered throwback to the Final Fantasy of yore.

CCP CEP Apologizes to EVE Players, Announces Winter Expansion

As the first step in addressing player concerns, CCP has announced a new winter expansion aimed at improving warfare and PvP.

Cryptic Team Reveals More About STO's Quick Road to Launch

As many suspected, Cryptic had a pressing launch deadline to meet for Star Trek Online in order to keep the license.
Catch up on previous Reloading... articles in the Archives
From the Something-Old-Something-Borrowed Dept. –

Couple Steals Copper Wiring to Pay for Wedding From the Urine-Trouble Dept. -

Nobel-Winning Researchers Establish Full Bladder Leads to Poor Driving From the Harvey-Dent Dept. –

Two-Faced Cat Sets Longevity Record


Find us on Facebook


 
 © 2011 Ten Ton Hammer  



Last Updated: Mar 13, 2016