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VTX3D Radeon HD6670 Review

Resident Evil 5, known in Japan as Biohazard 5, is a survival horror third-person shooter video game developed and published by Capcom. The game is the seventh installment in the Resident Evil survival horror series, and was released on March 5, 2009 in Japan and on March 13, 2009 in North America and Europe for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360. A Windows version of the game was released on September 15, 2009 in North America, September 17 in Japan and September 18 in Europe. Resident Evil 5 revolves around Chris Redfield and Sheva Alomar as they investigate a terrorist threat in Kijuju, a fictional town in Africa.

Within its first three weeks of release, the game sold over 2 million units worldwide and became the best-selling game of the franchise in the United Kingdom. As of December, 2009, Resident Evil 5 has sold 5.3 million copies worldwide since launch, becoming the best selling Resident Evil game ever made.

The HD6670 is at the bottom of the list, but it is worth bearing in mind that this is at 2560×1600 resolution with 4AA enabled ! The HD6670 actually manages to keep the frame rates above 40 fps for most of our benchmarking section, which is very impressive. Lowering the resolution to 1080p and dropping AA further would increase the frame rates considerably.

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5 comments

  1. interesting little card, looks almost like a plastic toy, but yet the cooler seems very good.

    Ideal little board for a small form factor machine hooked into a plasma.

  2. I like this series of cards, but the only issue I have with it, is AMD’s forced pricing levels. they need to drop them to 60 before I think they are really worth the cost

  3. I was doing a little research, arent these guys associated with powercolor?

  4. @ frankie, same parent company TUL. yes. Not sure why they need two sections of the company to produce graphics cards?

  5. Cheap poor excuse for a card, mine broke before i even used it as the cooler fails to keep the GPU cool. Wouldn’t touch with a barge pole and the Customer support is non existent