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Nvidia GTX980 Ti Review

Rating: 9.0.

Nvidia's Maxwell architecture has dominated the market since last year and today they release their new flagship board – the GTX980 Ti … slotting in above the GTX980 in the high end. The GTX980ti features 6GB of GDDR5 memory and a list of uprated specifications to bring it closer in line with the super expensive GTX Titan X.
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The GTX980 has been a high profile success story for Nvidia, however the 4GB of GDDR5 memory has been a sticking point for many – especially enthusiast gamers building a new Ultra HD 4K gaming system. The extra 2GB of GDDR5 memory fitted to the Nvidia GTX980 Ti will be welcomed by the audience who have held back on a GTX980 purchase so far.

Right now AMD lovers have two high end choices. The power hungry, dual GPU R9 295X2 has been reduced in price to £499.99-£599.99 via selected retailers and there are some 8GB R9 290X cards available from companies such as Sapphire. Until AMD release their new series of cards, Nvidia have been able to run amok in the high end.

Regular readers will be pleased to hear that it shouldn't be too long now before AMD will have some tempting solutions available – KitGuru will obviously be on hand to give you the inside story when the time comes.

GPU GeForce GTX960
Geforce GTX970 GeForce GTX980
Geforce GTX 980 Ti Geforce GTX Titan X
Streaming Multiprocessors 8 13 16 22 24
CUDA Cores 1024 1664 2048 2816 3072
Base Clock 1126 mhz 1050 mhz 1126 mhz 1000 mhz 1000 mhz
GPU Boost Clock 1178 mhz 1178 mhz 1216 mhz 1075 mhz 1076 mhz
Total Video memory 2GB 4GB 4GB 6GB 12GB
Texture Units 64 104 128 176 192
Texture fill-rate 72.1 Gigatexels/Sec 109.2 Gigatexels/Sec 144.1 Gigatexels/Sec 176 Gigatexels/Sec 192 Gigatexels/Sec
Memory Clock 7010 mhz 7000 mhz 7000 mhz 7000 mhz 7000 mhz
Memory Bandwidth 112.16 GB/sec 224 GB/s 224 GB/sec 336.5 GB/sec 336.5 GB/sec
Bus Width 128bit 256bit 256bit 384bit 384bit
ROPs 32 56 64 96 96
Manufacturing Process 28nm 28nm 28nm 28nm 28nm
TDP 120 watts 145 watts 165 watts 250 watts 250 watts

The Nvidia GTX980 Ti ships with 2816 CUDA cores and 22 SM units. The memory subsystem of the GTX980 Ti consists of six 64-bit memory controllers (384-bit) with 6GB of GDDR5 memory.

Today we test the Nvidia GTX980Ti against a modified GTX980, reference GTX Titan X, Sapphire R9 290X 8GB and as a topic of interest we also included the Nvidia Titan Z, and AMD R9 295X2 … both dual GPU solutions. We are using the latest Nvidia and AMD drivers (as of 25th May) to ensure even footing throughout.

Nvidia have controlled this particular launch, so we have no modified partner 980Ti's to highlight today. That said, we know the Maxwell architecture has always responded well to overclocking, so we get this out of the way first and include results at reference clock speeds and maximum stable settings, throughout the review. This should give a good indication of what partners will be able to squeeze out of the GTX980 Ti in the coming weeks.

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16 comments

  1. Disappointed kitguru….No 1080p ?

  2. Stephan Chase Morsanutto

    a 980 will already have no issue with 1080p…Anyone who buys a card this powerful has left 1080p behind

  3. Stephan Chase Morsanutto

    I wouldn’t say its overkill for 1440p….I personally have been waiting for a card that can get me great fps at this resolution. Sure a 980 will get me 60 fps in most games…but hell I have a 144hz refresh rate, and I love me some 100+ fps smoothness, even to the point that with my current 770, I crash my settings down just to make things smoother

  4. Why the 21 page format? It’s quite annoying to keep scrolling and clicking. Why not shorten it into a 7 page format, by saying putting the games on one page, the benchmarks on another, the temperature and power efficiency, etc.

    Good review though, wasn’t expecting one this soon, and unless AMD pull the stops out with Fury, then looks like I’m finally going to be upgrading for the first time in 4 years now! (had a chronic case of ‘wait-and-see’ syndrome).

  5. http://www.geforce.com/hardware/geforce-gtx-980-ti/buy-gpu advertised for 649.99 on Nvidia’s site

  6. Not really, what if I want to game on max settings for years to come and am still happy with the 1080p resolution?

    Not everyone is a resolution whore.

  7. I am going through the same “wait-and-see” syndrome. Pls halp.

    Should I wait for Intel Broadwell processors that are coming this fall along with whatever NVIDIA is going to roll out this year (if any)

    or should I build a system with a i7 4790K and 980Ti ?

  8. I see almost no sites are testing compute performance for the 980Ti … I assume NVIDIA have forbidden this …

  9. Enjoy holly days kitguru … kEEP READING

  10. Pascal’s not coming till next year…Nvidia’s using HBM2, and a new process for it, so it’s not possible for them to get it out before December.

    It all really depends on what you’ve got now, how long you’ve been waiting and how much you want to spend. If you’re rocking a 680/780 I’d say wait. I’m on a practically ancient 1.5GB 580 now, so this is my stop!

    Wait a couple weeks to see what AMD does. I’ve never bought from the Red team before, but everything we’re hearing about Fury is making it seem like it’s gonna wipe the floor with the 980Ti (ok, bit of an exaggeration). HBM1 could prove to be huge, and the card is incredibly small and has a hybrid cooling system, which is perfect for the SFF build I’m after.

    In terms of Broadwell…honestly, it doesn’t matter. Any i5/i7 will be more than enough, and yes, that extends all the way back to Nehalem.

  11. Are you planning on using it for a bit of mining? (see what I did there?)

  12. I play with an EIZO FORIS FG2421 monitor 240Hz in Turbo Mode and need 240 FPS constantly in 1920×1080.
    Só,a GTX 980TI is not enough for some titles such as : GTAV,Witcher3 and só on.
    I will wait for Pascal next year.

  13. Irishgamer Gamer

    hate this advert spam crap

  14. Now that is overkill, unless you’re some kind of MLG pro gamer who only plays shooter games in tournament’s. I’d take 4k at 40-60 fps over 240fps at 1080p any day of the week.

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  16. Great review Kitguru

    Maxwell Ti is Best GPU for a future proofing 4K gamine solution and its great performance per watt will enable its partners to offer highly overclocked version. Compute performance has no value to gamers whatsoever but the 980Ti 6GB of memory sure does for 4K gaming.