Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.

The newest benchmarking test by Unigine Corp shows off their UNIGINE 2 engine and rather impressive visuals. Get ready to push your GPUs hard!Having run the Superposition benchmark, I can confirm that it’s indeed a very demanding test. You can run the program in either a benchmark mode that automatically runs through a series of tests or engage it in game mode. In game mode you are free to play around with the physics, objects and lighting and get a real feel about what exactly is being rendered. Either way, it all looks pretty darn good. At the end of the benchmark, the program spits out a score which you can use to compare your results with other people.Though the Linux version of the benchmark includes a VR-ready test, actual VR support for headsets is currently not implemented. The choice of renderer is limited as well, with OpenGL being the only option available on our platform. Vulkan support would have been nice to have and hopefully it’ll be added in a future update. But given this tweet , it doesn’t seem like a certain thing.The benchmark itself seems to have good multi-threaded support, with its workload being spread out evenly across all my cores. The only issue I ran into in testing thus far is that it doesn't fully detect all my VRAM, only seeing 3GB out of 8GB on my RX 480. But the test itself had no problem using more than the detected amount when I cranked up the settings. The actual stress test is an advanced feature not covered in the free version so you'll have to buy a license to access it or use some of the other features, such as uploading results to a leaderboard.You try Superposition out for yourself by downloading it from here I sense that this is one of those benchmarks people will keep coming back to when comparing GPUs. So, are you impressed? What are your results like? Let us know in the comments!Thanks pete910 for the heads up