The FPS rate for bzflag on me is always 30> on windows, and changing the graphics setting to low or medium only changes thefps by 1-7. (i use expirimental.)
On Hix, Pillbox, and most other none 600+ object 1.x maps i get ~23
on everything else i get ~2-18 (usually 8-12)
I use ATI Radeon 9200 SE
8 FPS is sorta playable, but I'd like better playablility. Is it just my card that sucks or is there something else I can do? (I used to average 50 FPS, but this started about 2 months ago.)
BZFlag FPS
Video card model numbers are systematic. Both manufacturers use the same system, but the numbers are not comparable between them.
Higher series numbers do not mean the card is faster (i.e. the GeForce 7300 is much slower than the GeForce 6800). A higher series number in the same price bracket will usually be faster (i.e. the GeForce 7800 is faster than the 6800).
The first part is the series. Radeon X800 is X series, 9800 is 9k series, X1300 is X1k series, 8500 is 8k series, etc. In general, the higher the series number, the newer/more modern the card; typically each DirectX revision will be accompanied by several series of cards. Note also that series are heavily influenced by marketing, so there are usually some cards which don't actually belong to the series they're labeled as. The classic example is the GeForce4 MX, which is more like an overclocked GeForce2. ATI's X300 and X600 are actually uplabeled 9-series parts (they're R300 cores, approximately equivalent to the 9550 and 9600, respectively).
Radeons go through 7k, 8k, 9k, X, X1k.
GeForces go through 2, 3, 4, FX, 6k, 7k, 8k.
The second part is the price bracket. X300, 9200 are low-end, X1600, 9700, are midrange, X1900, 9800 is high-end. The higher this part is, the more expensive (and typically, faster and more capable) the card is.
Typically [000-500) is low-end or "budget", [500-700] is midrange, and (700-950] is high-end.
The third part is the performance designator. That's the XT in X1800XT, or the GT in 7800GT.
ATI usually goes by (in order of performance, slowest first) (HM, SE, or LE), (GT or RX), (no suffix), (GTO, XL, and new "Pro"), (XT and old "Pro"), (XTX)
nVidia usually goes by (same order) (MX, LE, or SE), GS, GT, GTS, GTX.
So, the X1300 is two generations newer than the 9200, but in the same price bracket. It has more features and is somewhat faster.
Higher series numbers do not mean the card is faster (i.e. the GeForce 7300 is much slower than the GeForce 6800). A higher series number in the same price bracket will usually be faster (i.e. the GeForce 7800 is faster than the 6800).
The first part is the series. Radeon X800 is X series, 9800 is 9k series, X1300 is X1k series, 8500 is 8k series, etc. In general, the higher the series number, the newer/more modern the card; typically each DirectX revision will be accompanied by several series of cards. Note also that series are heavily influenced by marketing, so there are usually some cards which don't actually belong to the series they're labeled as. The classic example is the GeForce4 MX, which is more like an overclocked GeForce2. ATI's X300 and X600 are actually uplabeled 9-series parts (they're R300 cores, approximately equivalent to the 9550 and 9600, respectively).
Radeons go through 7k, 8k, 9k, X, X1k.
GeForces go through 2, 3, 4, FX, 6k, 7k, 8k.
The second part is the price bracket. X300, 9200 are low-end, X1600, 9700, are midrange, X1900, 9800 is high-end. The higher this part is, the more expensive (and typically, faster and more capable) the card is.
Typically [000-500) is low-end or "budget", [500-700] is midrange, and (700-950] is high-end.
The third part is the performance designator. That's the XT in X1800XT, or the GT in 7800GT.
ATI usually goes by (in order of performance, slowest first) (HM, SE, or LE), (GT or RX), (no suffix), (GTO, XL, and new "Pro"), (XT and old "Pro"), (XTX)
nVidia usually goes by (same order) (MX, LE, or SE), GS, GT, GTS, GTX.
So, the X1300 is two generations newer than the 9200, but in the same price bracket. It has more features and is somewhat faster.