For AU$250, ATI's new 256MB Radeon HD 3850 will let you play most current 3D games at reasonable resolutions and detail settings. With a little hunting you can get it for around AU$180, although this will be just the box, the video card and a CD with a manual and drivers.
While it used to blitz the 8800GT in price (and occasionally outperformed in selected games), price drops have meant that spending a little more on NVIDIA's card with 512MB of RAM is definitely an option — and the release of the 9600 GT has well and truly put ATI in its place.
If you find the name "3850" confusing since ATI's highest-end card is currently the AU$600 Radeon HD 2900 XT, you're not alone. Be assured, though, that the Radeon HD 3850 is indeed supposed to be slower and less expensive than the older, higher-end model. The reason for the change to "3000" indicates a new generation of GPU that uses a new, more efficient chip design, going to 55 nanometres from 65 nanometres. And ATI also says it has eliminated suffixes like "XT" and "Pro," in favor of using the numbers to tell you that the 3850 is slower than the AU$270 Radeon HD 3870 that came out at the same time.
But in addition to tweaking the naming scheme, ATI has also added a few new features to both the 3850 and the 3870. Unfortunately, neither amounts to more than a marketing bullet point, at least in practical terms.
In addition to supporting all current games, the Radeon 3850 now includes hardware support for DirectX 10.1. This means that these cards will be able to play any games that take advantage of the next iteration of Microsoft's DirectX programming interface. If you're groaning at yet another Windows graphics update, don't worry. We wouldn't expect any game to require even DirectX 10.0 hardware for at least three or four years. Further, DirectX 10 has yet to convince anyone that its few added bells and whistles are worth the massive performance drop you take to even high-end cards. That tells you first that the midrange Radeon 3850 likely wouldn't be able to give you a very smooth frame rate in DirectX 10 or 10.1, and second that you're not missing out on much visually by sticking with DirectX 9 settings.
The Radeon HD 3850's other new feature is its support for PCI Express 2.0. You can still use the card on current PCI Express motherboards, but when the PCI-E 2.0 motherboards hit, you'd gain added graphics data bandwidth. Of course, no game can currently flood the first generation PCI-E pipeline, and if it did, we wouldn't expect a AU$250 card to be able to keep up with all that data. For a single Radeon HD 3850, then, PCI Express 2.0 support probably doesn't make a difference. But with AMD's new 700-series motherboards, you'll be able to use up to four of these cards in one PC, a new multi-GPU technology dubbed CrossFireX. With that much processing power, you might be able to handle a larger flood of graphical data, thereby justifying the next-gen interface support in a midrange 3D card. Of course, you'd still need the game to provide that much data at once, and we don't know of any right now that will. Then there's the fact that CrossFire with just two cards isn't the most stable technology in the world — we can only imagine the havoc with four.
Along with those new features, the Radeon HD 3850 also retains all of the highlights of the Radeon 2900's core technology. Mostly that refers to its suitability as a home theatre card. Like the Radeon 2000 cards, the Radeon 3850 is HDCP compliant, which means it can display protected Blu-ray content at resolutions up to 2,560x1,600 from your PC, if you have such an optical drive and a supporting monitor or TV. It also comes with an integrated audio chip, which means via ATI's specialized DVI-to-HDMI adapter, you can pump both video and audio over an HDMI cable to an HDTV. That greatly simplifies home theater PC installations, and is a real boon to all of the newer Radeons with that feature.
We suspect that if you're interested in this card, though, it's primarily for the purposes of PC gaming. We'll give our usual thanks to Sarju Shah at GameSpot for the benchmarks, which put the Radeon HD 3850 in a fairly competitive light.
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1280x1024 |
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2,048 x 1,536 (high quality) |
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1,920 x 1,440 (ultra quality, 4xaa) |
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1,920 x 1,440 (very high quality, 4xaa 4xaf) |
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1,600 x 1,200 (high quality) |
Shah ran all of his tests in Windows XP, so they're all DirectX 9, and at very aggressive detail and resolution settings that basically highlight where the Radeon 3850 chokes. And based on how the Radeon 3850 struggled on Crysis, you can see why it wouldn't make sense to try it with the very high DirectX 10 quality, as it's barely playable in DirectX 9. But the good news is that based on the other tests, you can expect that the Radeon 3850 will deliver solid performance on resolutions up to and possibly even including 1,920x1,200, which includes the native resolution of all wide-screen LCD but those massive 30-inchers. Chances are if you can afford one of those, you're probably looking for a more expensive video card as well.
What's maybe a little troubling on the performance charts, though, are the Radeon's CrossFire scores. On World in Conflict and Crysis, the CrossFire frame rates tanked, showing that at least in those games, ATI's dual card-support is basically broken. We imagine that the steady march of driver software updates will improve CrossFire's outlook, but for now, if you're planning to buy two of these cards in the hope of dialing up those Crysis settings, we'd suggest you hold off until ATI works out the kinks.
Like most modern graphics cards, the Radeon HD 3850 requires a direct connection to your PC's power supply to run. All you need is a free six-pin power line and you'll be set. This model comes in 256MB of 900MHz DDR3 RAM with a 667MHz core GPU clock. The faster Radeon 3870 comes with 512MB of DDR3 running at 1.2GHz, and with a 775MHz core clock. As they're modern graphics cards, each uses the unified processing pipeline, which means that shaders, geometry, and all other calculations flow through the same path, which can adjust dynamically depending on the workload for each process. Like the Radeon HD 2900, each of the new 3000-series cards has 320 stream processors, but they also have fewer transistors, 660 million to the 2900's 700 million. That explains why the 2900 remains the faster card for now. With its new 55nm manufacturing process in place, however, we wouldn't expect ATI's higher-end lineup to sit still for long, either.
Test bed configuration:
Windows XP Professional SP2; 2.93GHz Intel Core 2 Extreme QX6800; 2GB 1,066MHz DDR2 SDRAM; Intel 975X BadAxe II motherboard; ATI Radeon HD 3850, 3870, and 3850 CrossFire driver; Catalyst beta 8.43.1; Radeon HD 2900 XT driver: Catalyst 7.10; Nvidia driver; Forceware beta 169.09






