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    Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070 review


    The Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070 is the latest mid-tier graphics card from PC gaming heavyweight Nvidia, and it’s being pitched as ‘the’ best GPU for most gamers, with the firm quoting it as offering RTX 2080 Ti level performance.

    If accurate, this could make it one of the best graphics cards on the market, striking the perfect value-to-performance ratio. It’ll also be an impressive feat in general, given that the RTX 2080 Ti cost in excess of a grand at launch.

    So is it worth it? Answering that is a tricky. The RTX 3070 is the cheapest 30-series card on the market at the moment thanks to the absence of a the hotly rumoured RTX 3060. And, having thoroughly put the RTX 3070 through its paces, we can confirm it is an excellent option that strikes a solid balance between price and performance. Just don’t expect it to do 4K Ray tracing gaming at 60fps or above – the Nvidia RTX 3080 remains the entry point to that standard.

    But, with AMD Big Navi set to appear in the very near future and expected to radically undercut the RTX line on price, you may justifiably be wondering if it’s worth holding off and seeing what AMD has to offer if you are on a very strict budget.

    Related: Best Graphics Card 2020

    Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070 specs and design

    The RTX 3070 is built on the same Nvidia Ampere architecture as the more expensive RTX 3080 and RTX 3090 graphics cards. This means you get a few key new technologies not seen on any previous gen’ Nvidia GPU.

    These include new RT Cores and third-gen Tensor cores RT Cores. According to Nvidia the new RT Cores can deliver 2x more throughput than the Turing versions seen on the 20-series, making them more efficient and better at ray tracing.

    The new Tensor cores back them up with advanced AI chops that makes DLSS generally better at upscaling content, thus further improving frame rates. As a final bonus, it also supports a new Nvidia Broadcast app for AI-enhanced video and voice communications, which make it easier for streamers to add a “professional” veneer to their shows.

    The only obvious omission comparing the 3070 to the more expensive 3080 and 3090 cards is that the latter use Micron G6X video memory (VRAM), while the primary uses the same GDDR6 as the older 2070.

    The 3070’s specs sheet is also what you’d expect given its place in Nvidia’s current portfolio. This means it sits just below the 3080 in most areas featuring less tensor cores, CUDA cores and memory, but a lower TDP as a result. But that’s still a fairly impressive achievement, especially when you compare it to the previous generation Nvidia’s pitting it against.

    Nvidia’s made some impressive claims about the performance jump with a spokesperson quoting it as offering “2080 Ti level” performance across the board and “1.6x faster than the original GeForce RTX 2070” playing most titles.

    You can see a more thorough breakdown of how the 3070 compares to Nvidia’s other GPUs in the table below.

    Nvidia CUDA Cores Boost Clock Speed (GHz) Memory Graphics card power (W)
    RTX 3090 10,496 1.70 24GB GDDR6X 350
    RTX 3080 8704 1.71 10GB GDDR6X 320
    RTX 3070 5888 1.73 8GB GDDR6 220
    RTX 2080 Ti 4352 1.64 11GB GDDR6 260
    RTX 2080 Super 3072 1.82 8 GB GDDR6 250
    RTX 2070 2560 1.77 8 GB GDDR6 215

    On paper, the 3070 features a similar physical design to its other 30-series siblings. Specifically, it’s built using the same “super dense PCB design”. In layman’s terms, the design aims to improve cooling by letting the fan air to flow directly through the GPU. This in turn lets it reduce the GPU’s overall size. Nvidia claims the system makes the RTX 3070 16db quieter and offers 44% better thermal performance than the RTX 2070.

    Specifically this means the Founders Edition RTX 3070 looks a lot like its siblings and features the same atypical 12-pin power connector. An adapter comes in the box, so you won’t need to swap out your PSU when upgrading, if it’s powerful enough.

    But there are a few key differences. For starters the twin fan system places both coolers on top of the GPU’s top. The GPU is also noticeably smaller than the RTX 3080, being around two inches shorter. This, plus its lower TDP, could make it a better option for smaller builds, though be warned it’s still a fairly chunky monkey, so if that’s your goal you may be waiting for a third party mini-card from the likes of Zotac.

    Connectivity is also slightly different. Round back the 3070 features a single HDMI 2.1 and three DisplayPort 1.4a inputs.

    Related: What is HDMI 2.1?

    Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070 performance and benchmarks

    But, the most important question when picking a GPU is “how powerful is it?” and the RTX 3070 doesn’t disappoint. We reviewed the RTX 3070 using a rig with the below specifications. Every game we benchmarked was run with their graphical settings maxed out.

    Test rig specs:

    • Asus ROG Strix Z370-E Gasming (LGA1151)
    • Intel Core i9-9900KF
    • 16GB DDR4 RAM
    • Samsung SSD 860 EVO 500GB SATA SSD
    • Corsair RM750X PSU
    • MasterLiquid Pro 280 cooler

    Running the RTX 3070 through Trusted Reviews standard suite of benchmarks, the results were almost completely in line with Nvidia’s claims. The tests include a mix of synthetic benchmarks and real world, in game, testing.

    You can see how it performed in each test in the tables below.

    Editor’s Note: We didn’t benchmark the RTX 3070 against AMD’s latest cards as the ongoing pandemic cut us off from our samples. We’ll update this review when we can.

    Control


    Control is one of the best examples of Ray Tracing and DLSS. The game doesn’t feature an internal benchmark so we ran through a segment of the game full of advanced reflections, demanding physics and multiple NPCs, taking an average FPS count as we went.

    Here the RTX 3070 easily matched the performance of the RTX 2080 Ti, with the difference in frame rates being negligible across 1080p, 1440p, and 4K with Ray Tracing turned on or off.

    This means the card is more than powerful enough to run the game at post 60fps with Ray Tracing on in every resolution but 4K. Though given the price that’s hardly surprising.

    Battlefield V


    Battlefield V was one of the first games to support Ray Tracing and it remains a great test to see how any GPU will handle the tech in big open, multiplayer environments. The game features numerous demanding environments full of reflective surfaces and NPCs than can easily be counted.

    Like Control, Battlefield V doesn’t have an internal benchmark so we tested it by taking an average FPS count while playing a demanding section of the Nordlys War Story. Here the game ran at solid, playable frame rates in every resolution, including with Ray Tracing turned on, though once again it didn’t quite break 60fps in 4K.

    The Division 2


    The Division 2 is a massive multiplayer shooter with a huge active player base. It’s not the newest game and it doesn’t feature support for Ray Tracing or DLSS, but its internal benchmark is still a solid metric to gauge how a GPU will play most popular online shooters.

    During testing the RTX 3070 easily managed to run the internal benchmark, which features numerous explosions, lighting effects and NPCs in active combat, at over 60fps in every resolution but 4K.

    Borderlands 3

    Borderlands is another big budget online cooperative shooter. Though it has mass appeal Borderlands 3 is a pig of a benchmark that really pushes any GPU, even though it doesn’t support Ray Tracing. As a result its internal benchmark remains a solid indication how a GPU will handle any big-budget, triple-A game.

    With the game’s graphics settings maxed out the RTX 3070 once again delivered comfortable post 60fps performance in every resolution other than 4K.

    Doom Eternal

    Doom Eternal is a fast-paced,  first-person shooter. It’s also one of the best optimised games on the market and one of the only games we use for benchmarking that forces users to play using the increasingly common Vulkan, not Direct X 11/12 API.

    The only downside is that it doesn’t have an internal benchmark built in. We tested the graphics cards by checking the average frame rate after running through the opening section of the game’s first level.

    Horizon Zero Dawn

    Horizon Zero Dawn is a port of one of the PS4’s most beautiful, and ambitious, games. It’s a sci-fi epic full of huge high detail environments and advanced physics and effects that really put an GPU to task. Unlike Doom, it’s also not the best optimised game around, making it a good gauge how well a GPU will run super demanding / finicky games.

    Here again the 3070 was mere frames away from matching the 2080 Ti’s performance, meaning outside of 4K it’s more than powerful enough to run Horizon Zero Dawn at its max graphical settings above 60fps.

    3DMark Time Spy Extreme

    Time Spy Extreme is one of the most demanding tests in 3DMark’s library. It’s a synthetic benchmark designed to test a GPU’s Direct X 12 4K performance. As a general synthetic test it is a decent guide to judge a GPU’s overall performance. Unlike the other tests it doesn’t gauge performance in frames-per-second. Instead it just gives the card an overall numerical score. Higher is better.

    Port Royal is a benchmark bespoke designed to test real-time Ray Tracing. Like Time Spy, a higher score is better.

    The 3070 again matched the 2080 Ti Time Spy Extreme, cementing its record as a top-notch card for 1440p gaming, or 4K with Ray Tracing turned off. The only slight blip was that its Port Royal score was behind the 2080Ti, which is surprising given how closely the two have scored in our other tests.

    Overclocking heat and power consumption


    If you’re a massive tinkerer, be warned, the RTX 3070 is not massively overclockable. Doing a rough and read overclock in MSI Afterburner I was only able to get a 100MHz Clock and 120MHz stable boost.

    Any amount more than that and my benchmarking tools/games became unstable and prone to crashing. Considering how good the card’s raw performance, the trend is more than forgivable, though it does mean it’s unlikely we’ll see massive boosts in performance on third-party RTX cards from the likes of Asus, MSI, PNY and Zotac.

    Thermal performance and power consumption are also in line with what I’d expect from a 30-series monster truck GPU. During testing I found the RTX 3070 FE floated at a peak temperature of around 76 degrees while stress testing it in Time Spy Extreme. System power draw peaked at 324W during the same test, reflecting its lower TDP, making it a solid upgrade for people that don’t have a super high capacity PSU in their rig.

    Related: Best gaming monitor

    Should I buy the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070?

    As it stands, the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070 is the graphics card we’d recommend for any gamer looking for top 1440p Ray Tracing performance. It doesn’t have the wow factor of its more expensive 3080 and 3090 siblings, but it’s still a top notch card that offers fantastic bang for your buck. It’s even capable of hitting 4K if you’re happy to snub Ray Tracing and accept the occasional drop below 60fps for AAA games.

    The only downside is that with AMD Big Navi on the horizon and rumoured to be a huge upgrade on the firm’s past offerings, it’s hard to gauge how long term the 3070’s time in the sun will be. It’s probably best seeing what AMD has in store before committing to a purchase.

    The post Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070 review appeared first on Trusted Reviews.


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