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GeForce RTX 2080 3DMark Time Spy and Fire Strike scores leak
You know, I think it took less than an hour before Time Spy benchmarks leaked on the RTX 2080 after NVIDIA released a driver. Just wow, as that was even before I had a chance to download the driver myself.
The benchmarks have been posted in the UL ORB and contain fire strike and Tim Spy results done with the GeForce driver listed as 411.51. If you can believe the results, the GeForce RTX 2080 should match the GeForce GTX 1080 Ti when you look at the scores in Time Spy and Fire Strike which is a bit in line with expectancy I guess. Of course, you never know, and AIB product could (or not) be faster. Below a collage as meticulously collected by videocardz when posted by TUM APISAK on twitter.
« Intel Core i9-9900K 5GHz with Cinebench R15 test · GeForce RTX 2080 3DMark Time Spy and Fire Strike scores leak
· GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Availability Delayed by a week »
Review: Nvidia Turing architecture - GeForce RTX 2080 and 2080 Ti - 09/14/2018 03:00 PM
As time closes in on the actual performance reviews, today we'll be taking an architectural deep dive into the Turing graphics processors, and of course, we can share with you all specifications, y...
Download: NVIDIA GeForce 399.24 WHQL drivers - 09/10/2018 03:44 PM
You can now grab and download the GeForce 399.24 WHQL driver as released by NVIDIA. The drivers have optimizations for Shadow of the Tomb Raider, Call of Duty: Black Ops 4 Blackout open beta, and Asse...
NVIDIA: GeForce 1000 Series To Sell into 2019 - likely no RTX for Lower End Cards - 09/10/2018 08:40 AM
A series of interesting answers have been given in an interview by the executive vice president and chief financial officer of Nvidia, Colette Kress, the interview was performed by Seeking Alpha. ...
Micron delivers GDDR6 as NVIDIA launch partner on GeForce RTX - 09/05/2018 09:51 PM
In blog Micron shares, a word or two about their collaboration with NVIDIA and the Micron GDDR6 used on the cards. Developing high bandwidth gaming capability is not easy. ...
EVGA Shows HYDRO COPPER and HYBRID GeForce RTX models - 09/05/2018 09:26 AM
Over at Gamescom when we met with EVGA they've already shown an XC and FTW3 series GeForce RTX 2080 (Ti). On Social media the company now has released some renders of their liquid cooled cards. ...
Killian38
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Posts: 312
Joined: 2017-09-02
#5584745 Posted on: 09/15/2018 12:36 AM
That 8700k is clearly holding it back.
That 8700k is clearly holding it back.
beta-sama
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Senior Member
Posts: 139
Joined: 2012-11-14
#5584841 Posted on: 09/15/2018 10:40 AM
RTX 2080 Ti or nothing
https://www.3dmark.com/fs/15860055 My 1080 Ti at 33K...
RTX 2080 Ti or nothing

https://www.3dmark.com/fs/15860055 My 1080 Ti at 33K...
Andrew LB
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Senior Member
Posts: 1246
Joined: 2012-05-22
#5584939 Posted on: 09/15/2018 06:27 PM
The smart move would be to spend another $150 and get an RTX 2080 ti instead of buying a last generation card that doesn't have tensor cores for raytracing and DLSS. But even at $800-$850, it would definitely be worth the money over the 1080 ti for just those features.
Buying a 1080ti at full retail price is like buying a 2018 model year car at sticker price when the 2019 models have already arrived. Kinda foolish to buy something that has already depreciated a year.
I get 22,126. This is with my GTX 1080 Ti at its stock clocks, which boosts on the core default to 1974, and my R7 1700X at 3.8. As many people already knew, the RTX 2080 is not worth the 800-850 US it is selling for. Most people buying at this price level should just save 100-150 and buy the GTX 1080 Ti instead.
The smart move would be to spend another $150 and get an RTX 2080 ti instead of buying a last generation card that doesn't have tensor cores for raytracing and DLSS. But even at $800-$850, it would definitely be worth the money over the 1080 ti for just those features.
Buying a 1080ti at full retail price is like buying a 2018 model year car at sticker price when the 2019 models have already arrived. Kinda foolish to buy something that has already depreciated a year.
Fox2232
Senior Member
Posts: 11808
Joined: 2012-07-20
Senior Member
Posts: 11808
Joined: 2012-07-20
#5584946 Posted on: 09/15/2018 07:03 PM
The smart move would be to spend another $150 and get an RTX 2080 ti instead of buying a last generation card that doesn't have tensor cores for raytracing and DLSS. But even at $800-$850, it would definitely be worth the money over the 1080 ti for just those features.
Buying a 1080ti at full retail price is like buying a 2018 model year car at sticker price when the 2019 models have already arrived. Kinda foolish to buy something that has already depreciated a year.
Well if that 2019 model has turbo you expect to blow up within a year...
The smart move would be to spend another $150 and get an RTX 2080 ti instead of buying a last generation card that doesn't have tensor cores for raytracing and DLSS. But even at $800-$850, it would definitely be worth the money over the 1080 ti for just those features.
Buying a 1080ti at full retail price is like buying a 2018 model year car at sticker price when the 2019 models have already arrived. Kinda foolish to buy something that has already depreciated a year.
Well if that 2019 model has turbo you expect to blow up within a year...
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Looks on par with a 1080ti.
In the standard timespy I get 10025 gpu score (without manual overclock, so @1911mhz), that's on a 3770k @4.5ghz