AMD 790GX Chipset Review ~ 32FPS in Crysis

@ 2008/08/06
AMD built one heck of a north bridge chip with the 780G. Not only does it feature the fastest integrated graphics core around in the Radeon HD 3200, but the 780G is also capable of full Blu-ray decode acceleration for silky smooth 1080p playback with nominal CPU utilization. The 780G is an energy-efficient affair thanks to advanced 55nm fabrication technology, and it's loaded with 26 second-gen PCI Express lanes should your gaming aspirations grow beyond modest resolutions and in-game detail levels.

This tiny piece of silicon is so good that AMD's decided to spin it into a new model: the 790GX. With its graphics core boosted from 500 to 700MHz and the addition of sideport memory riding shotgun, the 790GX is perhaps best thought of as a 780G Type R. The graphics upgrades hit the PCI Express front, too, with the 790GX arriving on motherboards designed to accommodate dual-x8 CrossFire configurations.

The 790GX hasn't come alone, either. This chipset also brings with it AMD's new SB750 south bridge chip. This upgraded SB700 adds RAID 5 functionality and an Advanced Clock Calibration (ACC) feature that AMD says allows Phenom processor to overclock higher. Read on for the skinny on ACC, how well it works, and whether AMD has made a great chipset even better with the 790GX.

Comment from jmke @ 2008/08/06
How many people game at 800x600 low detail? At least make it so that people can run 1280x720 and play games at medium detail; so you can hook the system up to your HD TV and enjoy large screen gaming. If this system is to be a multimedia rig, have the power to back it up. For 1280x720 you don't need the latest VGA, even a 8500 GT allows for Crysis to run at 30fps at 1280x720 and UT3 runs at 40FPS at very high detail at that resolution.

while 800x600 low detail for the latest games is acceptable for IGP it's not really an option, I ran through Crysis at 800x600 with low detail with a 8500 GT and it's far from enjoyable as it becomes hard to make out the detail