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Unigine Heaven Shows What Linux Gaming Can Look Like

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  • deanjo
    replied
    As well as Windows 7 runs.

    Leave a comment:


  • deanjo
    replied
    Originally posted by Kano View Post
    GTX 275 is not really so fast that i would consider it as good upgrade. only 11 fps more than my 8800 GTS 512 @ 1920x1200. interestingly that's the first game that gains speed using firegl opengl renderer with ati, impressive gain from 8.3 to 9.3 fps @ 1024x768 windowed - well my card is so slow
    I plan to add runs for the 8800GT after work and then with a GTX 480 hopefully this weekend. I suspect that the processor is actually a bit of a bottleneck given that it pegs a single core. Shame it's not multithreaded.

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  • Kano
    replied
    GTX 275 is not really so fast that i would consider it as good upgrade. only 11 fps more than my 8800 GTS 512 @ 1920x1200. interestingly that's the first game that gains speed using firegl opengl renderer with ati, impressive gain from 8.3 to 9.3 fps @ 1024x768 windowed - well my card is so slow

    Leave a comment:


  • deanjo
    replied
    Originally posted by n0nsense View Post
    With all respect to ATI and their open source policy, they are not an option for me. I prefer really working closed source drivers that can accelerate 2D, 3D and video.
    Have anyone tried this demo on something over GTX 250 ?
    GTX 260,275 ?
    Also, it will be very interesting to see SLI results.

    See here

    Leave a comment:


  • xpander
    replied
    Linux:




    Windows:

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  • Kano
    replied
    So as hotfix for Debian Lenny (hopefully Unigine will update their installer soon):

    Code:
    sh Unigine_Heaven-2.0.run
    wget -qO- http://kanotix.com/files/fix/heaven/heaven.tar.gz|tar xz
    This adds libopenal 1.11.753 + updates the startup files to use those. I really hate to do that on my own...

    Leave a comment:


  • centx
    replied
    Antialiasing crashed the demo for me, running cat 10.2 on ubuntu 9.10. Also got sound stuttering =(

    FPS: 19.6
    Scores: 494
    Min FPS: 7.8
    Max FPS: 50.2

    Binary: Linux 32bit GCC 4.3.2 Release Mar 21 2010
    Operating system: Linux 2.6.31-20-generic-pae i686
    CPU model: AMD Phenom(tm) II X4 955 Processor
    CPU flags: 3214MHz MMX+ 3DNow!+ SSE SSE2 SSE3 SSE4A HTT
    GPU model: ATI Radeon HD 4800 Series 3.2.9551 Compatibility Profile Context 1024Mb

    Render: opengl
    Mode: 1440x900 fullscreen
    Shaders: high
    Textures: high
    Filter: trilinear
    Anisotropy: 16x
    Occlusion: enabled
    Refraction: enabled
    Volumetric: enabled
    Replication: disabled
    Tessellation: disabled

    Leave a comment:


  • n0nsense
    replied
    With all respect to ATI and their open source policy, they are not an option for me. I prefer really working closed source drivers that can accelerate 2D, 3D and video.
    Have anyone tried this demo on something over GTX 250 ?
    GTX 260,275 ?
    Also, it will be very interesting to see SLI results.

    Leave a comment:


  • quintesse
    replied
    Originally posted by mugginz View Post

    Originally posted by EarthMind View Post
    Despite from a few issues on Linux it's an awesome demo to try out. In times like this I wish I had bought a high end Nvidia card . ATI, please fix your drivers
    With any luck fglrx will get fixed soon. I really want to buy an ATI card.
    Not only should they fix their drivers, they should also make them available for distros like Fedora. It's ridiculous that they can't publish drivers for newer Xorg versions.

    Leave a comment:


  • Raven3x7
    replied
    Tesselation seems to cause a huge performance drop on my 5850. Will look into it more later. Could be cause i'm using 10.1

    Leave a comment:

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