The Guru of 3D published a review on the Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare PC graphics benchmark
A quote from the article:
Welcome to another PC performance review. It's that time of the year, Activision is releasing Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare. We will look at the game in our geeky gamer way. We'll test the game on the PC platform relative towards graphics card performance with the latest AMD/NVIDIA graphics card drivers. Multiple graphics cards are being tested and benchmarked. We have a look at performance with the newest graphics cards and technologies.Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare PC graphics benchmark review @ Guru3D
Call of Duty (2016) is a first-person shooter video game developed by Infinity Ward. It was first announced in 2014 when Activision announced that Infinity Ward, Treyarch, and Sledgehammer would all be developing Call of Duty games on a three year cycle instead of two as with previous installments. In this article we'll examine COD in our usual manners. We'll test the game on the PC platform relative towards graphics card performance with the latest AMD/NVIDIA graphics card drivers. Multiple graphics cards are being tested and bench-marked with the latest cards such as the GeForce GTX 10 series included as well as Radeon RX series 400 cards.
Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare is a title series that is both loved and hated. Many have been waiting for, and from the looks of it, the game will definitely deliver in a nice single player experience and multi-player awesomeness. As always the title is based on a dated rendering engine that is tweaked and tweaked with each year that passes. You are going to need a reasonably modern PC with at least a mainstream graphics card to run the game nicely. We test with the game based on the release from this week, all patched up combined with latest AMD Radeon Software Crimson drivers and for Nvidia drivers. This article will cover benchmarks in the sense of average framerates, we'll look at all popular resolutions scaling from Full HD (1920x1080/1200), WQHD (2560x1440) and of course Ultra HD. UHDTV (2160p) is 3840 pixels wide by 2160 pixels tall (8.29 megapixels), which is four times as many pixels as 1920x1080 (2.07 megapixels) and also 5k Ultra HD at 5120x2880 (!).