Windows 11 vs Windows 10 GPUs Tested: Which Games Faster? (2024)

Windows 11 vs Windows 10 GPUs Tested: Which Games Faster? (1)

I've been rather happily running and benchmarking graphics cards with Windows 10 since just after it launched in 2015. Microsoft tried to encourage people to upgrade by initially offering Windows 10 for free, plus it was the only OS with support for DirectX 12. Portions of DX12 were eventually backported to Windows 7, and you can still get Windows 10 for cheap, but now Windows 11 is the new kid on the block. So how does it perform, specifically with games? That's what we wanted to find out, so we grabbed the two best graphics cards from AMD and Nvidia and put them to the test.

Let's be clear: Change for the sake of change doesn't go over well with me, and Windows 11 puts a new coat of paint on the worn-in and comfortable feeling Windows 10 house I've been living in since 2015. A new coat of paint would be fine, and I'm not necessarily averse to that. But in the process, it seems as though the UI designers felt a need to rearrange the furniture, switch around the drawers, and clean house on a bunch of functionality that I actually like.

We've covered some of the worst Windows 11 changes, and how to fix them. Ultimately, two months after release, our Windows 11 launch impressions remain largely unchanged, and we're discovering even more disappointing aspects to the OS—like the Windows 11 SSD issues, which apparently still persist. With that in mind, I wanted to verify that Windows 11 doesn't impact graphics card performance before switching to the new OS. Of course, that switch is still in the works since I'll be shifting to an Alder Lake Core i9-12900K system for GPU reviews in the near future. And of course, using Alder Lake is one of the only good (sort of) reasons to switch to Windows 11, thanks to the new process scheduler that integrates with Intel's Thread Director hardware.

GPU Test PC

Intel Core i9-9900K
MSI MEG Z390 Ace
GeForce RTX 3080 Ti FE (497.09 drivers)
Radeon RX 6900 XT reference (21.12.1 drivers)
Corsair 2x16GB DDR4-3600 CL16
XPG SX8200 Pro 2TB (Win10)
Crucial P5 Plus 2TB (Win11)
Thermaltake Toughpower GF1 1000W
Corsair Hydro H150i Pro RGB
Phanteks Enthoo Pro M
Windows 10 Pro 2H21 (Build 19043.1348)
Windows 11 Pro (Build 22000.348)

What if you're not using Alder Lake, though? I took my current GPU testbed, which is now about three years old, and did a clean install of Windows 11 on a new Crucial P5 Plus SSD for testing purposes. I tested basically the fastest graphics cards from AMD and Nvidia, the Radeon RX 6900 XT and GeForce RTX 3080 Ti, and I also retested those cards on Windows 10 using the latest drivers and updates. (Yes, technically the 3090 is a bit faster and has twice the VRAM, but it's close enough and the 3080 Ti tends to be more readily available.) That means running the AMD 21.21.1 and Nvidia's 497.09 drivers, with a complete driver cleanup (via Display Driver Uninstaller) between testing. Here are the results of the 14 games I used for testing.

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Windows 11 vs Windows 10 GPUs Tested: Which Games Faster? (2)

Windows 11 vs Windows 10 GPUs Tested: Which Games Faster? (3)

Windows 11 vs Windows 10 GPUs Tested: Which Games Faster? (4)

Windows 11 vs Windows 10 GPUs Tested: Which Games Faster? (5)

If you were looking for yet another reason to hate on Windows 11, this is obviously disappointing. For those who are more open-minded, though, this is good news. Windows 11 may not be any faster at games than Windows 10, but neither is it any slower. Of course, we tested Windows 11 with VBS disabled—that was the default after a clean install on our test hardware. There has been some concern that VBS defaults to enabled on clean installs, but so far it looks like it needs to be explicitly enabled, which is likely only something you'll see from large OEMs and business PCs.

Across our 14-game test suite, the overall performance difference between Windows 10 and Windows 11 at three resolutions was less than one percent. There was one instance where Win10 was 4% faster (RTX 3080 Ti in Far Cry 6), and Assassin's Creed Valhalla was consistently 3% faster, but a few minor anomalies are to be expected. Sometimes Windows 10 was a bit faster and sometimes Windows 11 came out ahead, but in practice there wasn't any significant change.

The minimum fps (technically 99th percentile frametime converted to fps) results show a bit more variability, but that's always the case. Here we see an instance (Strange Brigade on the RTX 3080 Ti) where Win10 beat Win11 by 10%, and there are a few other cases of 5% differences, but a single frame or two rendering slowly can easily skew the results. That's why we don't place as much emphasis on minimum fps.

Interestingly, the RX 6900 XT was far more consistent in its performance across the two versions of Windows, where average fps was within 0.3% overall, and the biggest differences were still less than 2%. Even the minimum fps only had up to a 5.5% difference, and in that case, it was Windows 11 coming out ahead.

If you prefer seeing things in chart form rather than the above tables, here's a gallery of all 45 of the 1080p, 1440p, and 4K results. (Note: The above table uses the geometric mean for average, where all values are given equal weight, while the 14 game average charts below use the arithmetic mean and can skew due to "outlier" results.)

While these results are boring in general, they're good news because I'd hate to see the new OS penalize or benefit performance. Hopefully, Microsoft will walk back some of the UI changes, or maybe I'll just need to execute my own workarounds. Either way, my new Alder Lake build will basically require Windows 11, plus retesting all the GPUs on our new 2022 test suite. So that's how I'll spend much of January, I think.

If you're curious, I'm planning on using the following games for the coming year of graphics card reviews: Borderlands 3, Dirt 5, Far Cry 6, Flight Simulator, Forza Horizon 5, Horizon Zero Dawn, Red Dead Redemption 2, and Watch Dogs Legion. Note that seven of those use DirectX 12, with Red Dead being the sole Vulkan representative—and there are no DirectX 11 games in the list. I'll also use a somewhat different suite for ray tracing tests: Bright Memory Infinite, Control, Cyberpunk 2077, Far Cry 6, Fortnite, Metro Exodus Enhanced, Minecraft, and Watch Dogs Legion, with the goal being to use games that show some real visual benefits from enabling ray tracing. (Feel free to comment below if you think I've missed any game that warrants inclusion.)

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Windows 11 vs Windows 10 GPUs Tested: Which Games Faster? (51)

Jarred Walton

Jarred Walton is a senior editor at Tom's Hardware focusing on everything GPU. He has been working as a tech journalist since 2004, writing for AnandTech, Maximum PC, and PC Gamer. From the first S3 Virge '3D decelerators' to today's GPUs, Jarred keeps up with all the latest graphics trends and is the one to ask about game performance.

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32 CommentsComment from the forums

  • wifiburger

    No amount of fps gain or new feature will make me go back to Windows 11.

    The OS is a joke, full of bugs, slowdowns & a whole lot of crap multitasking / system response vs Windows 10.

    Ran Windows11 since day1 public release, never again... Went back to fresh install of Windows 10 last week and it's night / day !

    Reply

  • hotaru.hino

    And on the other end of the spectrum, been using Windows 11 since official launch. No perceptible changes in performance or reliability. Just annoyances with the taskbar changes that I have to get over.

    Reply

  • USAFRet

    hotaru.hino said:

    And on the other end of the spectrum, been using Windows 11 since official launch. No perceptible changes in performance or reliability.

    Actually, thats the same end of the spectrum.
    ex. 168FPS vs 171FPS is "no perceptible change".

    Reply

  • Makaveli

    Thanks for the review things are looking better.

    However I never touch a new OS in its first year so i will stay on Win 10 for now.

    Reply

  • hotaru.hino

    USAFRet said:

    Actually, thats the same end of the spectrum.
    ex. 168FPS vs 171FPS is "no perceptible change".

    I meant that as a reply to the person before me.

    Reply

  • USAFRet

    hotaru.hino said:

    I meant that as a reply to the person before me.

    ah, gotcha.

    Reply

  • froggx

    The article itself indicates the RTX 3090 was benchmarked. The tables and graphs with the results indicate the RTX 3080ti was benchmarked. I'm gonna take a shot in the dark and guess one of those is wrong.

    Reply

  • blppt

    Useful article, nice work.

    I'm not surprised with the results, as far as we know there are no major overhauls to the basic OS, so other than that weird 'core priority' change which results in Intel's new hybrid cpus being favored, its not surprising that the results are more or less identical.

    Reply

  • DanglingPointerException

    Meh...
    I haven't had Window$ on any machine or laptop at home for a decade now. Only have it in VMs on VBox when/if needed for work.

    Linux Lads! It's the future!

    Reply

  • JarredWaltonGPU

    froggx said:

    The article itself indicates the RTX 3090 was benchmarked. The tables and graphs with the results indicate the RTX 3080ti was benchmarked. I'm gonna take a shot in the dark and guess one of those is wrong.

    Fixed. It was the 3080 Ti tested. I got sidetracked between the testing and the writing when I tested Halo Infinite performance, where I used the 3090 and not the 3080 Ti. Then I forgot about that. (Getting senile in my old age...) My reasoning for the 3080 Ti over the 3090 is that the 3080 Ti is more readily available, costs less, and represents more of a direct competitor to the 6900 XT. Generally speaking, the 3090 is about 2-3% faster than the 3080 Ti.

    Reply

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