Introduction

GeForce RTX 2070 Super Market Segment Analysis Price Shader

Units ROPs Core

Clock Boost

Clock Memory

Clock GPU Transistors Memory GTX 1080 $500 2560 64 1607 MHz 1733 MHz 1251 MHz GP104 7200M 8 GB, GDDR5X, 256-bit RTX 2060 Super $400 2176 64 1470 MHz 1650 MHz 1750 MHz TU106 10800M 8 GB, GDDR6, 256-bit RX 5700 $350 2304 64 1465 MHz 1625 MHz 1750 MHz Navi 10 10300M 8 GB, GDDR6, 256-bit RX Vega 64 $500 4096 64 1247 MHz 1546 MHz 953 MHz Vega 10 12500M 8 GB, HBM2, 2048-bit GTX 1080 Ti $700 3584 88 1481 MHz 1582 MHz 1376 MHz GP102 12000M 11 GB, GDDR5X, 352-bit RTX 2070 $480 2304 64 1410 MHz 1620 MHz 1750 MHz TU106 10800M 8 GB, GDDR6, 256-bit RX 5700 XT $400 2560 64 1605 MHz 1755 MHz 1750 MHz Navi 10 10300M 8 GB, GDDR6, 256-bit RTX 2070 Super $500 2560 64 1605 MHz 1770 MHz 1750 MHz TU104 13600M 8 GB, GDDR6, 256-bit EVGA RTX 2070

Super FTW3 Ultra $580 2560 64 1605 MHz 1815 MHz 1750 MHz TU104 13600M 8 GB, GDDR6, 256-bit Radeon VII $680 3840 64 1802 MHz N/A 1000 MHz Vega 20 13230M 16 GB, HBM2, 4096-bit RTX 2080 $700 2944 64 1515 MHz 1710 MHz 1750 MHz TU104 13600M 8 GB, GDDR6, 256-bit RTX 2080 Super $700 3072 64 1650 MHz 1815 MHz 1940 MHz TU104 13600M 8 GB, GDDR6, 256-bit RTX 2080 Ti $1100 4352 64 1350 MHz 1545 MHz 1750 MHz TU102 18600M 11 GB, GDDR6, 352-bit

NVIDIA stirred up the graphics card market last week with the debut of its GeForce RTX Super family of graphics cards that increase performance at existing price points in a bid to preempt AMD's Radeon RX 5700-series "Navi" graphics cards. The first two of three RTX Super-series SKUs are the RTX 2060 Super and the RTX 2070 Super. NVIDIA displaced the RTX 2070 from its $499 price point with the better-endowed RTX 2070 Super as AMD beat the RTX 2070 at $399.The most interesting aspect about the RTX 2070 Super is that it's based on the 13.6 billion-transistor "TU104" silicon since NVIDIA had maxed out the "TU106" with the original RTX 2070. The "TU104" is at the heart of the much pricier RTX 2080 and upcoming RTX 2080 Super graphics cards. What this means to consumers is that most custom-design add-in card (AIC) partners would rather reuse their existing RTX 2080 board designs with a little cost-cutting on the VRM instead of spending money on developing and validating new PCBs. Another benefit is partners using heavy cooling solutions that were originally designed to handle the much hotter RTX 2080, and perhaps even the RTX 2080 Ti.NVIDIA carved the RTX 2070 Super out of the "TU104" silicon by disabling an entire GPC worth of CUDA cores, leaving the chip with 2,560 out of its 3,072 CUDA cores enabled, besides 160 TMUs, 64 ROPs, 320 Tensor cores, and 40 RT cores. The memory subsystem is untouched. 8 GB of memory ticks at 14 Gbps and sits across a 256-bit wide GDDR6 memory interface, churning out 448 GB/s of memory bandwidth. The GPU clock speeds are increased, too, with up to 1770 MHz GPU Boost frequency, compared to 1620 MHz on the original RTX 2070. Another neat little perk of being based on the "TU104" silicon is NVLink support, which enables 2-way SLI.In this review, we take a close look at EVGA's flagship RTX 2070 Super offering, the FTW3 Ultra. The perks of being based on the larger "TU104" silicon are apparent with this card as EVGA uses the same PCB as on its more expensive RTX 2080 FTW3 cards with a couple of power phases disabled. You still get the brutally heavy triple-slot, triple-fan XC Ultra cooling solution, RGB LED lighting, and plenty of iCX temperature sensors spread throughout the board. The card features a factory overclock to 1815 MHz GPU Boost against reference speeds of 1770 MHz. All this comes at a premium of $80 over the $499 MSRP of the RTX 2070 Super.Our coverage of the RTX Super Series custom-design launch day includes the following content: