Introduction

GTX 980 Ti Market Segment Analysis Radeon

R9 290 GeForce

GTX 970 Radeon

R9 290X GeForce

GTX 780 Ti GeForce

GTX 980 GeForce

GTX 980 Ti EVGA GTX

980 Ti SC+ GeForce

GTX Titan X Radeon

R9 295X2 Shader Units 2560 1664 2816 2880 2048 2816 2816 3072 2x 2816 ROPs 64 56 64 48 64 96 96 96 2x 64 Graphics Processor Hawaii GM204 Hawaii GK110 GM204 GM200 GM200 GM200 2x Hawaii Transistors 6200M 5200M 6200M 7100M 5200M 8000M 8000M 8000M 2x 6200M Memory Size 4096 MB 4096 MB 4096 MB 3072 MB 4096 MB 6144 MB 6144 MB 12288 MB 2x 4096 MB Memory Bus Width 512 bit 256 bit 512 bit 384 bit 256 bit 384 bit 384 bit 384 bit 2x 512 bit Core Clock 947 MHz 1051 MHz+ 1000 MHz 876 MHz+ 1126 MHz+ 1000 MHz+ 1102 MHz+ 1000 MHz+ 1018 MHz Memory Clock 1250 MHz 1750 MHz 1250 MHz 1750 MHz 1750 MHz 1750 MHz 1750 MHz 1750 MHz 1250 MHz Price $250 $310 $300 $390 $480 $650 $670 $1050 $620

NVIDIA's GeForce GTX 980 Ti was released just a few weeks ago. It is built on the same GM200 GPU as the GeForce Titan X, but has fewer shaders (2816 vs 3072). While the GTX 980 Ti's GPU is still produced on a 28 nanometer process at TSMC in Taiwan, it comes with the fantastic power efficiency optimizations of the NVIDIA Maxwell architecture, which promises lower power draw, higher performance, and reduced fan noise all at the same time.Our review of the reference design GTX 980 Ti revealed that it is barely slower than the Titan X, which means custom designs could surpass Titan X performance at a much lower price point.Today, we are reviewing the EVGA GeForce GTX 980 Ti SC+ with the company's ACX 2.0 cooler. The GTX 980 Ti SC+ is overclocked, as the name suggests. GPU clock has been increased to 1102 MHz base clock, but the memory clock remains unchanged. The card features idle-fan-off capability for the perfect noise-free experience at idle and light loads and is priced at around $670, which is $20 more than the NVIDIA reference design GTX 980 Ti.