| Mafia-II Video Game Performance | |
| Reviews - Featured Reviews: Games | |
| Written by Olin Coles | |
| Monday, 23 August 2010 | |
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Mafia-II Video Game Performance ReviewMafia II is a single-player third-person action shooter developed by 2K Czech for 2K Games, and is the sequel to Mafia: The City of Lost Heaven released in 2002. Players assume the life of World War II veteran Vito Scaletta, the son of small Sicilian family who immigrates to Empire Bay. Growing up in the slums of Empire Bay teaches Vito about crime, and he's forced to join the Army in lieu of jail time. After sustaining wounds in the war, Vito returns home and quickly finds trouble as he again partners with his childhood friend and accomplice Joe Barbaro. Vito and Joe combine their passion for fame and riches to take on the city, and work their way to the top in Mafia II.
Mafia II is a DirectX-9 compatible PC video game built on 2K Czech's proprietary Illusion game engine, which succeeds the LS3D game engine used in Mafia: The City of Lost Heaven. In this article, Benchmark Reviews tests the Mafia II Illusion game engine using ATI Radeon and NVIDIA GeForce video cards. PhysX and GeForce 3D-Vision technologies are revealed in Mafia II, which shape and build this game into an immersive experience. Characters and gameplay are explored, while game strategy is explained with Mafia II tips and hints added to help players get the most out of their time behind the trigger.
Product Name: Mafia II Full Disclosure: The product sample used in this article has been provided by 2K Games. Minimum System Requirements:
Recommended System:
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Comments
I like all of the old styled cars though.
The Phys-X eye candy might be worth buying a pair of GTX 460 1GB cards in a SLI configuration. (just to try it out)
Also, I really suggest Mafia-2 with 3D-Vision. The combination of APEX PhysX and 3D-Vision take this game to a whole new level.
You should check it for yourself by running the game again, except with the "Show PhysX visual indicator" option enabled in your Nvidia Control panel. It's there under the 3D settings menu, next to View and Help.
If it says PhysX > CPU, then it's processing PhysX effects via the CPU, if PhysX > GPU, then it's utilizing the GPU to produce physX effects.
greetings from germany,
Tef
what should I do to run the game without physx?