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 GeForce

GTX Titan X Radeon

R9 295X2 Shader Units 2560 1664 2816 2880 2048 2816 3072 2x 2816 ROPs 64 56 64 48 64 96 96 2x 64 Graphics Processor Hawaii GM204 Hawaii GK110 GM204 GM200 GM200 2x Hawaii Transistors 6200M 5200M 6200M 7100M 5200M 8000M 8000M 2x 6200M Memory Size 4096 MB 4096 MB 4096 MB 3072 MB 4096 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 2x 512 bit Core Clock 947 MHz 1051 MHz+ 1000 MHz 876 MHz+ 1126 MHz+ 1000 MHz+ 1000 MHz+ 1018 MHz Memory Clock 1250 MHz 1750 MHz 1250 MHz 1750 MHz 1750 MHz 1750 MHz 1750 MHz 1250 MHz Price $250 $310 $300 $390 $500 $650 $1050 $620

There is a strong push within the display industry to take 4K Ultra HD to the masses, especially with 4K monitors being sold deep under the $500 mark. A pair of any of today's $300-ish graphics cards in a multi-GPU setup can set you up for gaming at this resolution with reasonably high eye-candy. Back in March, NVIDIA launched the first single-GPU graphics card that lets you play any of today's games at 4K with high eye-candy, freeing you from the quirks of multi-GPU setups; it, on the flip-side, cost $1000, and you could only buy and use its noisy reference design if you didn't have a liquid-cooling loop. Competition from AMD in the form of its upcoming "Fiji XT" graphics card and the rush for pre-summer builds and upgrades have now prompted NVIDIA to fill the vast gorge between the GeForce GTX 980 and the GTX Titan X with the cheapest 4K-worthy single-GPU graphics card before the season's hottest games come out. Enter the GeForce GTX 980 Ti.The GeForce GTX 980 Ti is being launched at the $650 mark, the traditional price point at which NVIDIA sold its high-end single-GPU products before it started asking $1000 for its fastest single-GPU graphics cards. The GTX 980 Ti is also a true successor to the GTX 780 Ti based on NVIDIA's biggest silicon for the "Maxwell" GPU architecture, the GM200. Unlike its predecessor, it does not feature the full complement of CUDA cores on the silicon and is hence positioned a notch below the GTX Titan X. NVIDIA probably did so to avoid the repeat of the GTX 780 Ti cannibalizing the GTX Titan Black; buyers with deep pockets are lured with the prospect of buying a GM200 card with all its cylinders unlocked in the GTX Titan X.The GeForce GTX 980 Ti, which we are reviewing today, still has a serious lot going for it. It features 2,816 of the 3,072 CUDA cores on this silicon, which NVIDIA achieved by enabling 22 of the 24 SMM units. The TMU count is 176 (compared to the 192 on the GTX Titan X), and the ROP count is confirmed to be 96. NVIDIA seems to have learned from the GTX 970 ROP-count and memory-configuration drama. The chip is wired to 6 GB of GDDR5 memory across its 384-bit interface and can address all of it at a consistent bandwidth. The clock speeds are similar to those of the GTX Titan X.The best part about this SKU is that NVIDIA will allow its board partners to innovate custom-design boards with factory-overclocked speeds, so the inadequacy of NVIDIA's reference cooler and its PCB could be overcome. Along with launching the GTX 980 Ti at $650, NVIDIA repositioned the GM204-based GTX 980 at $500. In this review, we will deal with the reference-design GeForce GTX 980 Ti to give you have a crystal-clear idea of whether NVIDIA managed to fill the gap between the GTX 980 and the GTX Titan X.