Killer-Kris said:
...
Please don't make an idiotic statement saying "Far Cry sucks because it doesn't specifically tell me how my box will run Doom 3," because unlike 3DMark, FarCry will tell you how well FarCry runs on that particular hardware and Doom3 will tell you how well Doom3 runs. What does 3DMark tell you about games?
3dMk is what? Is it a benchmark designed to tell you how every game will run on your system, or is it a "gamer's benchmark" designed to provide you with information as to how your current
hardware is
likely to perform in software gaming situations
which use the latest in API feature support, support that might be months or even a year or more away from actually being implemented in shipping 3d games? Of course, the correct answer is the latter, imo. The API functionality 3dMk supports is both real and current--the implementation of that API feature support in shipping games is likely to be much later in coming, however. Does the fact that a benchmark supports current API functionality that won't be seen in shipping games for months, but will indeed be seen in them eventually because its already in the API, somehow invalidate 3dMK as a benchmark? I cannot see how, and on the contrary, would think it actually buttresses the value of 3dMk as a hardware benchmark particularly well suited for 3d gamers.
Understand that
I didn't say, "3dMK sucks because it tells me nothing specifically about how Doom 3 runs on my box," but [H] said it, and I was merely illustrating what a ridiculous, inappropriate statement that is. It's exactly as ridiculous as saying, "Far Cry sucks because it tell me nothing specific as to how my box will run Doom 3."
While Kyle didn't state it in necesarily the best manor, what he was likely meaning was that no one plays 3DMark, it's not a game and it should not play a very large role in determining whether a piece of hardware plays a game well or not.
No benchmark of any type, be it a cpu bench, a hard drive bench, a hard-drive controller bench, a ram bus bench, ad infinitum, wil ever, under any circumstances, tell you how your box will run
any specific 3d game. Therefore, if that is a valid reason for tossing out 3dMk, then all other benchmarks are also meaningless and worthless for the same reason.
But it's easy as pi to illustrate what's wrong with that notion, because none of these benchmarks, including 3dMK, is designed for the express purpose of informing the user as to how any specific game will run on his system. Instead, these benchmarks, including 3dMk, are designed to provide
other information about the tested hardware which is both general and generic in nature. That, of course, is the difference between a "benchmark" and a "game."
Now with that said, that's not to mean that 3DMark isn't with out it's uses. I for one believe that 3DMark is and will forever be infinitely invaluable to sites like B3D because it gives you a peak into a possible future, and shows hardware strengths/weaknesses that we would otherwise never see. It allows you to in a controlled environment to change settings variable by variable in order to isolate particular behavior and is just an all around excellent tool for that sort of work.
Good observation, which of course undermines everything else you said previously, but duplicity of thought seems to be an abiding characteristic surrounding this topic...
Yes, 3dMK is a benchmark, not a game, and should be used and thought of only in that capacity. I'm not aware of FutureMark ever representing it differently.
Let's call a spade a spade, shall we? Prior to nVidia's "War on 3dMk" in late '02 and for most of '03, [H] had little to say about 3dMk that was negative, and as I recall, even used the benchmark regularly in its hardware reviews. Since then, of course, nVidia has mended fences, called off the war, and is happily paying FM all those outrageous fees it complained so bitterly about when in its wartime posture. nVidia has moved on, FM has moved on--but where is [H]? Stuck in the same old rut, that's where...
[H] reminds me of the blissfully ignorant general still fighting the war long after it has ended. The thing I'd really love to hear [H] rationalize is why it thinks its opinion on 3dMK is legitimate when the 3d-gpu IHVs like ATi and nVidia consider it worth the price of admission. The fact that both IHVs consider paying the benchmark company for its services a worthwhile endeavor must mean that in some tangible fashion both companies feel the benchmark reflects *something worthwhile* about the nature and capabilities of the 3d-gaming products they make.