![]() The RTX 3070 Ti is configured at the maximum power rating as offered by Nvidia, that's 125W plus 5W of Dynamic Boost. The GM5AG7Y chassis we have on hand features a 15-inch 1440p 240Hz display, an Intel Core i7-12700H processor and 32GB of DDR5 memory in a dual-stick configuration. ![]() The test platform for today's review was provided by XMG and their partner Uniwill. Because the desktop card is not as power constrained, it will perform a lot better. It's also important to note the laptop 3070 Ti GPU is not the same as the desktop card: the desktop model has 2 more SMs, higher clock speeds, and faster GDDR6X memory. On paper, the RTX 3070 Ti Laptop sits between the RTX 30 as you'd expect, getting very close to the 3080 in terms of core configuration, but featuring power options in line with the 3070. The memory subsystem, offering 8 GB of GDDR6 clocked up to 14 Gbps, remains identical to the RTX 3070. However, to fit this larger core count into the same 80-125W power range, clock speeds have been reduced down to a maximum of 1485 MHz rated boost in the 125W configuration. It increases the number of SMs from 40 in the older RTX 3070, up to 46 with the Ti model, getting very close to the full 48 SMs available with the RTX 3080 Laptop GPU. The RTX 3070 Ti is based on Nvidia's Ampere GA104 silicon. We already covered the RTX 3080 Ti, so in this review we'll see how the more mainstream tier model compares to Nvidia's flagship along the rest of the laptop GPU landscape across a range of games. ![]() Today we're taking a quick look at Nvidia's GeForce RTX 3070 Ti Laptop GPU, the second of two new GPU refreshes for 2022 mobile gaming systems.
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