EVGA GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Ftw3 Ultra, Overclocked, 2.75 Slot Extreme Cool Triple + iCX2, 65C Gaming, RGB - View 1

EVGA GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Ftw3 Ultra, Overclocked, 2.75 Slot Extreme Cool Triple + iCX2, 65C Gaming, RGB

4.5 (959 ratings)
~$1,289.00
View on Amazon

Key Features

  • Real Boost Clock: 1755 MegaHertz; Memory detail: 11264MB GDDR6; Get smooth, tear-free gameplay at refresh rates Upto 240 Hz, plus HDR, and more. This is the ultimate gaming display and the go-to equipment for enthusiast gamers.
  • Triple HDB fans and all new cooler offers higher performance cooling and much quieter acoustic noise
  • Adjustable RGB LED offers configuration options for all your PC lighting needs. Compatibility of the EVGA GeForce RTX 2080 Ti FTW3 ultra gaming, 11G P4 2487 KR, 11GB GDDR6, iCX2 Technology, RGB LED, Metal Backplate (11G P4 2487 KR)
  • Built for EVGA precision x1, EVGA all new tuning utility monitors your graphics card and gives you the power to overclock like a pro
  • Requirements: Minimum of a 650 watt power supply, two available 8 pin or 6+2pin PCIe, power dongles, total power draw: 250 watts. Windows 10 64 bit, Windows 7 64 bit.
  • Get grip game + EVGA vehicle skin w/ Purchase, redeemed at EVGA website, while supplies last

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Customer Reviews

Amazon Customer
The two built in fan curves are just ok. Less noise, but more heat and heat is a killer of speed. I used EVGA Precison X1 to set manual fan curves. Mine are 70% through 80c then 100%. My case has 6 Noctua fans ($20.00 each). While the stock Corsair fans are reasonably quiet, the Noctua fans are silent. Yes, you hear AIR whooshing, but the video card rarely gets above 70c. My TV is a Samsung 4K 48" with no Gsync or Freesync. Playing WoW with all but ground clutter at max (so i can see chests etc. easier) the lowest fps was 70 (flying really fast over the tree tops) and my average is 120 (pretty much every where). No tearing or stuttering and no AA enabled in the WoW menu. This particular card is HUGE. If you did want to use two of them, the top cards fan air intakes would be severely restricted. Why you would need two does beg the question as one RTX 2080 Ti (EVGAS' top model) runs 4K with ZERO issues. Replacing my EVGA 1080 Ti FTW3. My 1080 ran my 27" rogswift IPS monitor (same settings) with no issues, but did struggle at times running my 4k TV, but it DID run my 4k TV. If like me you really really want to play games on a large 4k TV, EVGAs 2080 Ti fits the bill. down side? it's $1,500.00. I was holding out for AMD and Nvidia to release their next set of video cards, but decided not to wait until October or even later. My ASUS X-99 decided to quit working, so went with GIGABYTE X570 Auros Master, two Sabrent 1T 4.0 and 3600x chip set. Only one M.2 slot is pcie 4.0 the other 2 are 3.0. I liked the cost and feature set of the MB versus other offerings that had two or more 4.0 enabled M.2 slots. I do not have any tools that would show how fast the X-99 (with Samsung M.2) versus the X570 are, but both boot quickly (at least the X-99 used to). Cost was just under $1,000 to replace my MB, chip set and two HD. I included information on my system so you would know what the 2080 ti was running in. I've built 5 computers for family members and all 5 used Corsair carbide air 540. Windowed panel, thumb screws for panels and filters and VERY easy to install components in.Bottom line: If a 2080 Ti is in your budget, it's a great performer.
henry mitchell henry mitchell
This is an absolute beast of a GPU. It’s basically overkill. It can run every game ultra settings on 1440p. It can also run almost all games high settings on 4k. If you are gaming on 1080p or 1440p, You don’t need to turn on the fans, because the card can easily handle these resolutions, which makes it extremely silent. While gaming on higher resolution and higher settings, you still might not need the fans on that high, but if it makes you comfortable, go for it! On the EVGA Software, you can pick the speed of the fans, if you put anything under 40% speed it’s practically silent, and it cools the gpu very well. Even for heavy gaming, there is no reason to take the fans to over 60% because 60% speed with these 3 fans and big heatsink, cools the card just fine. However, this card is extremely expensive right now, and won’t fit most people’s budget. Any card really won’t fit your budget currently. But if i’m just reviewing the card and not the price then this card is probably overkill, but a gamers dreams. Again, this thing is a beast, and will satisfy your gaming experience for years to come. If you know that these prices aren’t going down soon and you need a beefy GPU, this is the card for you. PS. You might want to buy a sag bracket at the time of buying this GPU, this gpu is a monster in performance, and size. I forgot to buy one, and I can already see the card tilting down, this really isn’t a problem at first, but overtime that sag can grow and potentially rip the pcie connecter of the PCB of the GPU or rip the pcie slot of the motherboard.
Rhynocerous
This card goes for $999 on EVGA's site, but the least I've seen it for online is about $1,170 (you can get the reference card on nVidia's site for $1,199). This always happens when cards are originally released that people will buy them and then scalp for higher than retail. I was originally really upset that nVidia decided to make the 2080 at above the 1080 Ti release price and the 2080 Ti at the Titan Pascal price. What's the game changer is the TU102 chip, 11GB of GDDR6 VRAM in the 2080 Ti along with DLSS (Deep Learning Super Sampling) and ray tracing. This really is a professional card.I game at 1440p so the 1080 Ti was a great choice. I still love that card, but wanted to try the new features of the 2080 Ti. The price is silly, but the new hardware is no joke. There still are only a handful of games (and 3DMark) that use DLSS or ray tracing; I've only tried the benchmark in 3DMark, but ray tracing and DLSS really are amazing. Granted, 3DMark made a specific test to show this off (and nVidia has made a test for DLSS), but the reflections and lighting are incredible. nVidia wanted to get in the market before AMD to charge crazy prices so there really are few games that can use this new tech, but it will happen soon enough. I am bummed that the 2080 doesn't give much of a performance bump over the 1080 Ti because of the price. I had to shell out another $400 bucks to get about 30% better frames at 1440p.I've only had time to play Monster Hunter: World and Far Cry 5 with the new card. With the 1080 Ti I was getting 60-75 FPS on Monster Hunter and about 60-100 FPS on Far Cry 5. Monster Hunter hasn't gotten much better as I'm now getting about 60-90 FPS with the 2080 Ti, but Far Cry 5 has gone up to 90-144 FPS (144 Hz monitor). Monster Hunter World requires a serious amount of hardware, so I'm not too worried about the performance difference. I am excited to try Tomb Raider and Metro Exodus. I've seen from other reviews that turning on ray tracing decreases performance. The other HUGE thing is that because of the adoption rate of the 2080 and 2080 Ti, nVidia is releasing ray tracing on Pascal cards. They will probably take a fairly deep dip in performance since they don't have the same processing power as the 2080 and 2080 Ti, but at least nVidia is trying to give new software enhancements to people that can't afford the new flagship cards. DLSS can increase quality while also increase framerate when programmed correctly. The 1xxx series cards can't do that.Yes the price is crazy, yes scalpers are getting extra money, but this card is the real deal. The only faster consumer card is the Titan RTX, but it goes for an incredible $2,500 with only about a 10% increase in FPS. You could SLI two 2080 Ti's for cheaper. I've heard the 2080 Ti can run most games in 4K at 60 FPS which is the holy grail of gaming. I tend to side with professional reviewers that framerate is more important that resolution which is why I have a 1440p monitor and not a 4K monitor. The other issue is getting a 4K monitor that can go over 60 FPS. There are only a handful of them out there and they cost at least a grand.If you have the money, the 144Hz+ monitor, and the patience to wait for features to be released for new games, this is the best choice. If you're on a 900 series card and are running 1440p or 1080p, this card is overkill- go with the 2070 or 2080. It's ironic that 1080 Ti prices have climbed again so you're paying the same or more than for the 2080.I have quite a few fans in my case, so using the Precision X1 software, I'm able to keep the card at about 73 C using the auto fan curve feature. I can hear the card, but it's not any louder than my 1080 Ti Founder's Edition. Being able to change the LED is nice since I have a blue theme in my case. I've almost always gone with EVGA because their customer support is the best and they provide so many choices in cards. Even though there is the FTW3 and cards that are better cooled, I'm still able to get about 1800 MHz on the card just using the X1 software. I don't see a huge need to spend $100-300 more for that, but that's my opinion.Enough rambling. If you have the $ and want high resolution, high framerate goodness, buy this card.Machine Specs:MSi MEG z390 ACE MoboIntel i7-9700k OC to 5 GHz with Corsair H80i V2 coolerEVGA 2080 Ti Black Edition16 GB Corsair RGB DDR4 3000 MHzSamsung 850 Pro SSD for OSSeagate SSHD 4 TB for games and storageEVGA SuperNOVA 1000 P2, 80+ PLATINUM 1000W PSU