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Review: Nvidia Titan X (Pascal)

by Tarinder Sandhu on 3 August 2016, 10:32

Tags: NVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA)

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qac47p

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Conclusion

...Titan X is 60 per cent faster than its immediate predecessor and 20-25 per cent speedier than a well-overclocked GTX 1080.

The Nvidia Titan X is the fastest consumer graphics card ever made, and it's the first to lay credible claim to being a true 4K60 GPU.

Benchmarked at the preferred 4K resolution, Titan X is 60 per cent faster than its immediate predecessor and 20-25 per cent speedier than a well-overclocked GTX 1080. Performance, then, isn't in doubt.

Nvidia achieves the lofty numbers by using a larger Pascal die that, at 471mm², is considered actually quite conservative for a top-end GPU when judged by recent standards, thus intimating just how efficient Pascal is.

In an area bereft of serious competition for a while, Nvidia can charge what it deems the market will bear for a consumer graphics card, and $1,200 (£1,099) is the entry fee to the absolute best single-GPU performance available.

Anyone surprised at the price shouldn't be. This isn't a GPU for GTX 1070 wannabees, it's not a GPU for those who think going down the SLI route offers more performance, and it certainly isn't a GPU for people whose main remit when purchasing is value for money.

Titan X is decidedly ostentatious in nature. It's for the person who wants, and can readily afford, a £5K PC built with the very latest goodies the world of tech has to offer - Core i7-6950X, 2TB NVMe SSD, etc. That person isn't me, probably isn't you, but enough exist for Titan X to be a marketable GPU.

Common sense infers that GP102 will be distilled into a GeForce GTX 1080 Ti soon, at a more attractive price point, so Titan X is, as very much designed, an early-adopters' card.

As impressive as the numbers are, especially when overclocked, hammering everything else out of sight, Titan X isn't perfect. The GPU isn't a full implementation of the GP102 die and the cooler, while looking and feeling lovely, really isn't up to the task of getting the most out of the underlying silicon. This is a card begging to be watercooled.

Nvidia's Titan X sets a new standard of what's possible in PC gaming. Quite simply, it's the card that everyone wants.

The Good
 
The Bad
A new level of performance
Benchmarks well when OC'd
Beautifully built
Massive framebuffer
 
Not full implementation of GP102
Cooler holds potential back



Nvidia Titan X (Pascal)

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The Nvidia Titan X is available to purchase from GeForce.co.uk.

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HEXUS Forums :: 63 Comments

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Wonder how it compares with the Radeon Pro Duo - the only card that's currently up there in price. I suspect it spanks it, but a quick comparison would be nice.
You get me one, I'll let you know. :)
To costly and to little gain, and the 4K single cards do not reach acceptable standards still, so I guess if you are crazy buy one, but would recommend not to unless you have other stuff in mind than just gaming, Nvidia is more or less laughing at the consumers though, the extra gain with any of the new cards is really not a leap into the future however you look onto the situation.
Common sense infers that GP102 will be distilled into a GeForce GTX 1080 Ti soon, at a more attractive price point

Yeah…£899

Should make all the difference to affordability and people thinking they're not being bent over and robbed blind by Nvidia
QuorTek
To costly and to little gain, and the 4K single cards do not reach acceptable standards still, so I guess if you are crazy buy one, but would recommend not to unless you have other stuff in mind than just gaming, Nvidia is more or less laughing at the consumers though, the extra gain with any of the new cards is really not a leap into the future however you look onto the situation.

Pascal was never on the roadmap, the jump should have been from maxwell to volta, but nvidia changed their plans to include pascal which is maxwell on small die with higher clocks on same voltages to milk another year from the market as AMD vega will not come before 2017.

they hit the jackpot with this plan, as much as i hate to admit it, they know exactly what they are doing and their plans are working perfect.

unfortunately this is what happens when competition is missing, the market is open for only one player who plays with it the way he wants.