The MSI RTX 5070 Ti Gaming Trio presented today offers a balanced mix of performance, cooling and design and positions itself as the ideal middle ground between the simple Ventus series and the high-end Vanguard variant. Thanks to the powerful Tri-Frozr 3 cooling system with three fans, the card ensures low temperatures and low noise levels without reaching the size or weight of the high-end models. The optimized heat dissipation ensures stable performance, even during longer gaming sessions or demanding applications, which remains to be proven.
Compared to the Ventus, the Gaming Trio offers improved cooling, a higher-quality power supply and discreet yet appealing RGB lighting. At the same time, it remains more compact and less massive than the Vanguard variant, which is designed for extreme overclocking and maximum cooling performance. This makes the MSI RTX 5070 Ti Gaming Trio particularly suitable for users who are looking for a powerful but not oversized card and do not want to compromise on solid cooling or an appealing look.
Today, I will be comparing this card with the MSI GeForce RTX 4070 Ti Super SUPRIM in particular and the entire Ada lineup of matching super cards in general. I’m also leaving out Ampere this time due to time constraints, but since there are enough comparisons between Ada and Ampere on my site, this is certainly easy to get over. And we want to look forwards and not backwards.
The GB203-300-A1 GPU in detail
The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5070 Ti is based on the GB203-300-A1 graphics processor, which is part of the Blackwell architecture. This chip has 8,960 CUDA cores, 280 texture units and 96 render output units (ROPs). The GPU is equipped with 70 ray tracing cores and 280 tensor cores, which improve performance in AI applications and ray tracing. The GPU base frequency is 2.3 GHz and can reach up to 2.45 GHz in boost mode.
The card is equipped with 16 GB of GDDR7 memory, which is connected via a 256-bit memory interface and offers an effective memory bandwidth of 896 GB/s. The power consumption (TDP) of the RTX 5070 Ti is 300 watts. A 16-pin 12V 2×6 connection is used for the power supply.
Well, and RGB is also on board this time, as well as a dual BIOS, which only makes the fan curves a little more aggressive.
The GB203-300-A1 chip is manufactured by TSMC using the 5 nm process and comprises around 45.6 billion transistors on a die area of 378 mm². The RTX 5070 Ti is designed for gaming and creative applications and offers support for technologies such as DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation, NVIDIA Reflex 2 with Frame Warp and hardware-accelerated ray tracing. It is capable of delivering high frame rates at resolutions up to 4K, making it suitable for the latest AAA games and professional applications.
The card weighs a hefty 1.3 kilos (1296 grams) and its dimensions are 335 mm in length (installation length with slot), 120 mm in height (from the top edge of the slot) and 48 mm in installation depth (including backplate). One HDMI 2.1b port and three DisplayPort 2.1b interfaces are available for connecting external devices, while the card is integrated into the system via the PCIe 5.0 x16 interface.
The RTX 5070 Ti supports DLSS 4 and even offers acceptable performance for gaming in 4K at reasonable graphics settings as well as for creative applications such as 3D rendering and video editing. The benchmarks will clarify the rest.
The GeForce RTX 5070 Ti has a Thermal Design Power (TDP) of 300 watts, which can be increased to 330 watts for OC cards like this one, placing it in a range that is unfortunately now typical for upper-class graphics cards.
The GPU-Z screen shows the remaining key data of the card tested today:
I’ll save myself any further architectural descriptions at this point and refer you to my launch article on the RTX 5090 FE and the MSI RTX 5090 SUPRIM SOC, for which I’ll then also explain the electrical details in more detail:
- 1 - Einführung und Details zur Blackwell GB203-300-A1 GPU
- 2 - Testsystem und Equipment
- 3 - Teardown: Platine und Kühler
- 4 - Materialanalyse und Wärmeleitmaterialien
- 5 - Gaming Performance; Rastergrafik
- 6 - Gaming Performance: Supersampling, RT & FG
- 7 - Leistungsaufnahme, Lastspitzen und Netzteilempfehlung
- 8 - Kühler, Temperaturen, Thermografie, Geräuschentwicklung
- 9 - Zusammenfassung und Fazit
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