...the GeForce RTX 3070 Ti feels lost in the premium space.
The Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070 Ti comes armed to the premium graphics card party with a full implementation of the mainstream GA104 Ampere die. Further boosting performance compared to the non-Ti variant by using 19Gbps GDDR6X memory, the on-paper specifications paint it in a positive light at the supposed $599/£529 price point.
Truth is not so kind. Nvidia's decisions increase the power budget by a considerable 70W over the non-Ti model but performance only scales seven per cent higher, due to a lower real-world boost speed and a lack of benefit from faster, power-hungry GDDR6X memory. In that respect, the Ti is not a good a deal as last year's standard RTX 3070: the modest speed increase arrives with one-too-many compromises caused by Nvidia driving this GPU hard.
GeForce RTX 3070 Ti does benefit from a mature ecosystem - raytracing performance is clearly ahead of the competition and DLSS is a proven value add - but we'd liked to have seen Nvidia match the 16GB frame buffer of rival Radeon RX 6800. It cannot readily do so without escalating power further, and no-one wants to see a fourth-rung part consume 350W.
Underscored by a background of severe shortages, the GeForce RTX 3070 Ti feels lost in the premium space. It's not much faster than the non-Ti, consumes far more energy, and has half the memory of rival Radeon RX 6800. It's also the proverbial mile off the $100 dearer GeForce RTX 3080 that's armed with much beefier silicon.
In light of findings, this is the weakest GeForce RTX Founders Edition of the 30-series performance generation. Only consider it if you're lucky to find one in stock at reasonable prices.
The Good
The Bad
Full GA104 implementation
Latest-gen RTX and DLSS tech
Solid at 4K
Limited hash rate (good for gamers)
Barely any stock
Minor improvement on RTX 3070
Only 8GB memory
Thirsty on power
Little frequency headroom
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TBC.
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