facebook rss twitter

Review: KFA2 GeForce RTX 2070 Super Work The Frames

by Tarinder Sandhu on 24 April 2020, 14:01

Tags: KFA2

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qaeknu

Add to My Vault: x

Conclusion

KFA2's done well with what it has to work with. Excellent thermals and a distinct lack of noise are most appreciated...

The GeForce RTX 2070 Super remains a solid card at a £500 price point. Impressive numbers at, particularly, FHD and QHD resolutions makes it well suited to being paired with a quality adaptive-framerate monitor for premium gaming thrills and spills.

KFA2's Work The Frames Edition prioritises size and lighting over sleekness and minimalism. The end result is an imposing card redolent with gaming attributes still sought by many coming into the serious PC games space for the first time.

The real question is whether the >£100 price premium over the RX 5700 XT is worth it? Both cards are about the same speed, so what you're really shelling out for is RTX-specific features.

That said, KFA2's done well with what it has to work with. Excellent thermals and a distinct lack of noise are most appreciated, so we feel as if the WTF does carve a small niche for itself in the wider gaming spectrum.

Bottom line: a colourful, supremely quiet RTX 2070 Super card that's a bit different from most.

The Good
 
The Bad
Excellent thermals
Very quiet at all times
Solid build quality
Lighting galore
 
Memory not overclocked
Not any faster than cheaper 5700 XT



KFA2 GeForce RTX 2070 Super Work The Frames

HEXUS.where2buy*

TBC.

HEXUS.right2reply

At HEXUS, we invite the companies whose products we test to comment on our articles. If any company representatives for the products reviewed choose to respond, we'll publish their commentary here verbatim.



HEXUS Forums :: 5 Comments

Login with Forum Account

Don't have an account? Register today!
I like how there's substantially less heatsink than fan area. It stops about halfway across the outer fans in the images - excusable for the IO end, as they need to fit a heatpipe bend, but on the other end the fan is just blowing into empty space. A two fan setup on that heatsink should perform the same and be a bit cheaper, but that would have meant less RGB
Xlucine
I like how there's substantially less heatsink than fan area. It stops about halfway across the outer fans in the images - excusable for the IO end, as they need to fit a heatpipe bend, but on the other end the fan is just blowing into empty space. A two fan setup on that heatsink should perform the same and be a bit cheaper, but that would have meant less RGB

It looks like there is another heatsink under the 3rd fan, it is behind the power connectors that's what I'm seeing on the introduction page photos?
lon3wolf2002
It looks like there is another heatsink under the 3rd fan, it is behind the power connectors that's what I'm seeing on the introduction page photos?

The power connector end has a clear void:


The IO end has the heatpipe bend visible here:
Check out some funny pop art throw pillows
Xlucine
I like how there's substantially less heatsink than fan area. It stops about halfway across the outer fans in the images - excusable for the IO end, as they need to fit a heatpipe bend, but on the other end the fan is just blowing into empty space. A two fan setup on that heatsink should perform the same and be a bit cheaper, but that would have meant less RGB

The WTF series cards from KFA2 are well known to be for those “all for show” and “let's overdo everything” RGB clowns, as evident by the pointless 3rd fan and the plastic backplate which isn't going to do anything for either the temps or rigidity. On a card this expensive , heavy and long. Aptly named I'd say.
The regular EX series come with “only” 2 fans and a fairly thick aluminum backplate. Those are for the folks that still have some brain left. Noticeably cheaper too. And the only real difference between the two is 15MHz boost clock.