Gaming Performance

As usual, gaming performance was tested with a variety of current games. We ran our benchmarks at a 1280x1024 resolution with high quality settings

Battlefield 2

This benchmark is performed using DICE's built-in demo playback functionality with additional capture capabilities designed in house. During the benchmark, the camera switches between players and vehicles in order to capture the most action possible. There is a significant amount of smoke, explosions, and vehicle usage as this a very GPU intensive Battlefield 2 benchmark. We run Battlefield 2 using medium quality graphics settings available in the video settings. The game itself is best experienced with average in-game frame rates of 35 and up.

Gaming Performance - Battlefield 2

Company of Heroes

Company of Heroes was released last year and is still proving to be a very addictive RTS game around the office. The game is extremely GPU intensive and also requires a hefty CPU at times. The game contains a built-in performance test that utilizes the game engine to generate several different action scenes. We find the performance test gives a good indication of how well your system will perform throughout the game on average. Some of the in-game action sequences can be more demanding than the performance test, however, and we are working on a repeatable game play benchmark. For now, we find the game to be enjoyable with an average frame rate score in the performance test above 35fps.

Gaming Performance - Company of Heroes

Prey

Prey offers some superb action sequences, unique weapons and characters, and is a visually stunning game at times. It still requires a very good GPU to run it with all of the eye candy turned on. We set all graphic settings to their maximum except for AA/AF and utilize a custom timedemo that takes place during one of the more action oriented sequences. We generally find the game to be enjoyable with an average frame rate above 35fps.

Gaming Performance - Prey

Supreme Commander

Supreme Commander is one of the favorite real time strategy games around the office as it continues to provide a great deal of replay value and the graphics are very good once the eye candy is turned on. What we especially like about the game is the fact that it can bring the best system to its knees and that fact makes it a great system benchmark. This particular game requires both a very good CPU and GPU when playing the game at anything above 1024x768 with decent settings. We utilize the game's built-in benchmark and generally find the game to be enjoyable with an average frame rate above 25fps.

Gaming Performance - Supreme Commander

Gaming Summary

The Foxconn MARS board performed admirably in the game tests although in the bandwidth sensitive Prey test it placed near the bottom of the group. Overall, the board continues its pattern of finishing in the middle of the pack. Considering the group of boards in the test group, this is actually an accomplishment for Foxconn.

Audio, Compression, and 3D Rendering Performance Disk Controller Performance
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  • Tujan - Tuesday, October 2, 2007 - link

    You used a 1000Watt PSU on this review. Do you think that it would be possible to post the load,and non-loaded power stats for these boards.?

    My thinking is that a person could get by with 600 watts w/o a overclocker profile. Yet I do not know. The PSU suppliers are making larger,and larger power supplies. Yet (at least for me) I do not see that my peripheral count is actually going to be larger. And w/o overclocking the CPUs actually do not require higher wattage values.As a specification at retail.

    [ ]Could a person get by on the set with this review on only changing the PSU to 600,or 750 Max PSU ?

    And what is the boards load values ? Wich boards are better.Seems that with the several layer curcuit boards the power requirement would be less,not more .[though I know the video cards are really eating the power up-they have their limit'].

    Thanks good article.Nice board Foxcon.
  • mostlyprudent - Monday, September 24, 2007 - link

    I always enjoy motherboard reviews, BUT did I miss the long awaited P35 roundup? If it's still in the works, why the single board review?
  • Etern205 - Sunday, September 23, 2007 - link

    In your test setup it says you guys used 2x2048 Corsair ram
    modules which equals to 4GB, but in those cpu-z screen shots
    it only show 2GB instead of 4. Is that right? Shouldn't it show
    4GB instead of 2?

    And the images do now work when users try to enlarge them.
    All I get is a server error.

    Thank you.
  • wwswimming - Sunday, September 23, 2007 - link

    Foxconn has a boatload of experience manufacturing
    motherboards. up till now i've thought of them
    partially in terms of their "cheap specials at
    Fry's", kind of like ECS, where they sell the
    board-CPU combo for the price of the CPU.

    BUT i learned something new, 8 x 435 was it, 3.2
    + .24 + .040, (is my math right ?), 3.48 GHz for
    the Q6600.

    that plus the clean layout ... i like the
    North Bridge South Bridge heat sink design.
    plain old aluminum heat sinks work real well
    if you get enough inlet air to them, which is
    not hard to do. one heat pipe. not over-designed.
  • Lord Evermore - Sunday, September 23, 2007 - link

    No mainboard costing 200 dollars can be called "budget". Under 75 is budget level. I hate having to even go to 125 to get a full-featured board instead of the exact same board costing 30 less but which is missing one crucial feature. Over 150, I want ALL the trimmings, and none of that "disables the x1 slots if you use Crossfire" crap. WTF is that?

    Mainboards are too damned expensive these days.
  • emilyek - Saturday, September 22, 2007 - link

    Before this review, I had a pretty good idea where this board would fall in terms of performance. I've seen FOXCONN products here and elsewhere before.

    It made me want to ask: "Why are some motherboards better performers than others?" I mean, they use the same chipsets, right?

    What, specifically, is the reason that one company consistently falls a few paces behind others? It is board layout? Type of components used?

    Someone enlighten me.
  • JarredWalton - Saturday, September 22, 2007 - link

    Board layout can impact things a bit, but mostly it's the BIOS and tuning - or lack thereof.
  • lopri - Saturday, September 22, 2007 - link

    I noticed for this review that 2GB DIMMs were employed for total 4GB system memory, and there was no mention of overclocking/stability when all 4 DIMM slots were filled. I do not know whether the compared boards from other vendors were also equipped with 2x2GB DIMMs, but it does raise a few questions.

    1. From my experience (which means it may not be generalized), when memory capacity isn't a factor, 2GB sticks tend to show better performance than 1GB sticks if same number of slots are occupied. (all others being equal) I don't have an exact understanding on this but if this is indeed a case and other boards were tested with 4x1GB configuration, the performance results (especially synthetic ones) could be kinda skewed?

    2. Was the board able to maintain the same overclock/stability when all 4 slots were occupied? Again, from my experience Intel desktop MCHs (or maybe it's the boards/BIOSes) left quite a bit to be desired. I would like a little more detailed comments on this front.

    Excellent review as always. Thanks.
  • lopri - Saturday, September 22, 2007 - link

    Oh and also there is the factor of interleaving when comparing 2 slots vs 4 slots. I do not know how much but I would think it matters when the performance varies by like 1% among different boards.
  • yyrkoon - Saturday, September 22, 2007 - link

    I see they also implemented the Northbridge<->PWM section cooling with heatpipes. Recipe for hot PWM with an Overclocked 4 core CPU . . . and what the hell is up with all these hokey heatsink designs these companies are comming up with ? The BIOS monitoring application looks like something you would see on a 5 year olds lunch box as well.

    I would be more impressed if these companies would work on something functional, and quite this 'bling bling' look that makes their products look tacky. The ethernet performance is fairly impressive, but for this cost, with the stupid looking application/hokey heatsinks, and the fact that they cannot seem to get it into their heads that putting the PWM section, and the northbridge on the same heatpipe loop is not a good thing, I would not even consider this board.

    Another gripe is the JM eSATA port. IF they *need* to include an eSATA port, why not put in something that can actually fully supports FIS Port multiplier technology ?

    Anyhow, aside from the GbE performance, I think this board is a loser . . .

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