@ugzz: dude, you own the cream of the crop from three years ago. Of course it rocks ! Not to mention the original Titan turned out to be... a castrated 780 Ti.
OK, here's the kind of framerates you can expect from a stock Titan X at 6060x1200 paired with an i7 @4.2GHz in Win7 x64. I've used max-ish settings to stress the card, but I reckon you can easily gain 5-10 fps everywhere with minimal optimisation.
Format: (min, max) avg
Batman Arkham City MSAA 4X, DX11 Extreme, PhysX Off: (64, 95) 74 MSAA 4X, DX11 Extreme, PhysX Normal: (54, 82) 65
Metro 2033 Redux Very High, SSAA Off, AF 16X: (16, 151) 44 Very High, SSAA Off, AF 16X + Advanced PhysX: (12, 156) 39
The Talos Principle Demo MSAA 4X, Max 3D Rendering MPix Unlimited: (24, 579(!)) 48
Tomb Raider Ultimate + Shadows Ultra, Hair Quality TressFX: (43, 64) 53 Ultimate + Shadows Ultra, Hair Quality Normal: (55, 80) 66
Total War: Attila Quality, AA Off, AF 16x, DOF Off, SSAO Off : (28, 46) 38
Middle Earth: Shadow Of Mordor Ultra + High Texture Quality: (29, 48) 41 - VRAM: 2.9 GB Ultra + Ultra Textures: (28, 49) 40 - VRAM: 5.2 GB (visual difference: nil)
Some random facts: - a single 780 Ti OC is 23% behind the X on these tests. Impressive really. - a Radeon 295X2 beats the X by 20% (Batman AC's PhysX makes it a bit unfair). TressFX hits it just as much as the GeForces. - 12 GB VRAM on a 16 GB system is not a problem (as long as the framebuffer is not full, anyway). For future-proofing, Nvidia recommends 24-48 GB system RAM (and an OS that supports as much)... - Surround is generally much less VRAM-hungry than 4K and downsampling. Typical VRAM usage in these tests was 1.5 to 3 GB. Most VRAM used: SoM Ultra/Ultra/200% (12120x2400), 7.9 GB @11 fps !
There's a lot to discuss about this card but time is a bit short atm. I'll answer any questions as best I can.
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