Nvidia has posted a new driver - the GeForce 337.50 Beta driver. Normally we wouldn't give driver releases all that much attention, though this one is a little different.

Nvidia claimed that this driver will bring some very big performance improvements in a whole number of games. Some games will experience performance improvements of up to 64 percent on single GPUs, while SLI performance can be boosted by as much as 71 percent. The optimizations have been done through optimizations with DirectX, specifically reducing CPU overhead in certain games.

With such claims though, we wanted to have a crack at the numbers ourselves to see what the real-life effects are, so we cleaned our system, installed the drivers, and started the benchmarks. We weren't running the exact same hardware platform as Nvidia was running, but this would only serve to make things a little more interesting.

Test Platform:

Test Hardware Processor Intel Core i7-4770K @ Stock Clocks Motherboard Asus Maximus VI Impact Graphics Reference Nvidia GTX 780 Ti 3GB Memory Corsair Vengeance Pro 16 GB (2 x 8GB) DDR3-1866, 1.5 V System Drive Samsung 830 256 GB SATA3 (6Gb/s) Operating System Windows 8.1 Pro x64

The biggest difference between our test system and Nvidia's test system is the CPU. Nvidia is running a monstrously powerful Intel Core i7-3960X while we're 'only' running an Intel Core i7-4770K. Of course, the i7-4770K is still a very power processor, and it is also something that you're a lot more likely to encounter in a gaming system than an i7-3960X.

1080p Performance:

We actually got some very interesting results for our 1080p performance tests. Tomb Raider and Battlefield 4's performance went up with similar amounts to Nvidia's claims. Unigine's Heaven Benchmark actually ran an average of 0.2 FPS lower over three test runs, though that falls within a margin of error.

The biggest surprise was Star Swarm, as we got a very big performance jump (almost 60 percent) -- much higher than Nvidia's claim of "up to 21 percent". Because I wasn't sure that this was correct, I actually reverted back to the old driver and re-ran the Star Swarm tests another three times. This changed nothing... The Nvidia GeForce 337.50 Beta driver really gives Star Swarm a significant boost! Without more testing, we wouldn't be able to say exactly why we got a much bigger performance jump than Nvidia advertised, though one possibility is that that it was because we had a less powerful CPU installed, and the reduced CPU overhead thus made an even bigger impact. In the past, folks have referred to Star Swarm as "An AMD marketing tool" -- that's probably over now.

1440p Performance:

1440p performance followed the same trends as the 1080p performance, giving both Tomb Raider and Battlefield 4 a nice little performance boost. Unigine's Heaven benchmark again ran just the way it did before, which is interesting in, well, how uninteresting it is.

Unfortunately, we didn't have another GTX 780 Ti at our immediate disposal, so it was a bit difficult to run SLI benchmarks. That said, we'd imagine that the performance gains would, like Nvidia claims, be even higher than on single-card configurations, as you're more likely to run into CPU bottlenecks when running more graphics cards.

All in all this is one of the most impressive driver releases we've seen in a long time. Nvidia's point to all this is to show that you don't need a new API and developer support in order to be able to get performance gains, but that time well spent optimizing drivers can make a big difference too. That said, competition from AMD's Mantle API likely pushed Nvidia to develop these optimizations. In the end, it's the gamers who win.

You can find the drivers available for download here on Nvidia's website, where you'll also find the complete release highlights.