Skip to main content

Get excited: GTX 1080 benchmarks are here, and better than expected

gtx 1080 review roundup kv 1462594232 900x600 edited 1
Nvidia
Nvidia’s latest and greatest has finally landed, and expectations are high, to say the least. The GTX 1080 moves to a smaller architecture and ups the ante on performance, but it faces tough competition in the form of the incredibly popular GTX 970 and importantly, the 980 Ti.

We haven’t been able to spend time with the card yet, but we’ve scoured the web for benchmarks, features, and design impressions so you don’t have to.

What’s old is new again

Like most new GPUs, the first example of the GTX 1080 is the Nvidia produced reference design, or “Founders Edition,” as the company has dubbed it. This time around, the introductory version of the card actually packs some special features, though. For one, the previous heat pipe and blower construction has been improved with the return of the vapor chamber from the original Titan introduction, and the power supply has been upgraded to a five-phase unit.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

Its redesigned shroud is also much more exciting and dangerous looking than the previous blower. Whether the jagged edges and tessellated appearance fit in with your build is up to personal taste, but its efficiency can’t be argued with. The reviewers that measured temperatures found the card’s power efficiency and temperatures have both improved a bit over last year, despite the performance increase.

The GTX 1080 boasts improved connectivity too, even if it doesn’t appear to from the outside. The trio of DisplayPorts are now 1.4 instead of 1.2m for up to 8K at 60Hz or 4K at 120Hz, and the HDMI port is now 2.0B, for 4K at 60Hz with High Dynamic Range, a feature the GTX 1080 now supports.

Take a picture

Basically every feature and specification on the GTX 1080 has improved over the GTX 980. There are more stream processors, more CUDA cores, improved memory bandwidth, and a shrunken architecture, but we’ll get to what exactly that means for performance. First, we’ll take a look at a couple of features that reviewers mentioned specifically having tried out.

One of the more important additions, especially considering the high framerates the GTX 1080 achieved, is the new Fast Sync technology. Like a G-Sync for framerates that fly past your monitor’s refresh rate, Fast Sync lets your GPU render frames as fast as it wants, and then the card decides which frames to show. That means dropped frames, but most reviewers pointed out that this feature works quite well for games like Dota 2 or Counter-Strike: Global Offensive where speed is everything, and quality isn’t the goal.

There’s also the new Ansel feature, which allows users to take incredibly detailed in-game screenshots in 2D or 360-degree for VR. It’s a driver utility that has to be enabled by each game’s developer, but doing so in The Witness only required 40 lines of extra code, according to the PCWorld review. The result is a free-floating camera that stitches together up to 3,600 individual, high-resolution shots, with special filters and effects to improve your photography.

Although Nvidia makes no claims about the GTX 1080’s overclocking potential, its unlocked cores and improved tuning are sure to grab gaming enthusiasts’ attention. One of them is GPU Boost 3.0, which allows users to set different overclocking settings depending on the card’s current voltage.

King of the hill

The result of these new features and generational improvements is impressive, but the benchmarks speak for themselves, especially at lower resolutions. We could share 1080p results, but with even mid-range components backing it up, expect the GTX 1080 to stay well above 60 frames per second in basically any modern game.

As the resolution rises, so does the GTX 1080’s lead over comparable cards. With the exception of SLI or CrossFire setups, and DirectX 12 games where AMD currently has an advantage, the GTX 1080 doesn’t lose a benchmark to a single GPU setup in any of the reviews we checked. In a fifteen game average, the GTX 1080 ties or beats two GTX 980s in SLI, trouncing every other card in the competition, according to PCGamer’s review. That kind of overwhelming, unambiguous victory is a rarity in the PC gaming market.

Overall, the GTX 1080 is tough to compare to the GTX 980 because it’s so much faster – about a 70 percent jump, according to Anandtech. Instead, it’s a more direct comparison to the 980 Ti, at least in terms of price. Even then, the GTX 1080 is over 30 percent faster than the 980 Ti, and it carries a slightly higher margin of victory over AMD’s Fury X.

Conclusion

At the end of the day, the new GTX 1080 is a vast improvement over last year’s cards, and even beats out two GTX 980s in SLI on a good day. It also quickly claimed the title of fastest single graphics card setup for consumers in the gaming space, at a price that comes in well below cards like the Titan X that it beats.

Reference cards haven’t always been gamers’ first choice, and this one carries a larger premium than ever. It’s more likely than ever that PC builders will chase down a overclocked version of their favorite third-party cooler if they want to upgrade to the 1080, and save some cash in the process.

We’ll wait until we have the GTX 1080 in hand to settle on a formal score or recommendation, but it’s clear the newest generation of Nvidia cards are geared up for a successful summer, especially once the non-reference designs roll out.

Editors' Recommendations

Brad Bourque
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Brad Bourque is a native Portlander, devout nerd, and craft beer enthusiast. He studied creative writing at Willamette…
Power up your tech game this summer with Dell’s top deals: Upgrade for a bargain
Dell Techfest and best tech on sale featured.

One of the best times to upgrade your tech stack, be it your desktop, a new laptop, or some high-resolution monitors, is when great deals are to be had. Well, I'm here to share that thanks to Dell's top deals, you can power up your tech game and have most of the summer to make it happen. Maybe you're happy with your current system or setup. That's excellent, but you're likely considering upgrading somewhere, and that's precisely what these deals are all about. Dell has a smorgasbord of deals on laptops, desktops, gaming desktops, monitors, accessories, and so much more. We'll call out a few of our favorite deals below, but for now, know that you should be shopping this sale if you're interested in anything tech-related.

 
What summer tech should you buy in Dell's top deals?

Read more
I love the MacBook Pro, but this Windows laptop came surprisingly close
Apple MacBook Pro 16 downward view showing keyboard and speaker.

There are some great machines in the 15-inch laptop category, which has recently been stretched to include the more common 16-inch laptop. The best among them is the Apple MacBook Pro 16, which offers fast performance for tasks like video editing and the longest battery life.

The Lenovo Yoga Pro 9i 16 is aimed not only at other 16-inch Windows laptops but also at the MacBook Pro 16. It offers many of the same benefits but at a lower price. Can it take a place at the top?
Specs and configurations

Read more
How to set an ‘Out of Office’ message in Microsoft Teams
Person using Windows 11 laptop on their lap by the window.

Many people use Microsoft Teams regularly to communicate with colleagues both inside of the office and remotely. It is considered one of the most efficient ways to ensure you can stay in contact with the people on your team, but what if you need to let people know you’re not readily available? Microsoft Teams has a method for you to set up an "Out of Office" status for your profile to let staff members know when you’ll be gone for the afternoon, for several days on vacation, or for an extended period.
Where do I go to set up my ‘Out of Office’ status for Teams?
It is important to note that your Microsoft Teams and Outlook calendars are synced. This includes your out-of-office status and automatic replies. So, whatever you set up in Microsoft Teams will reflect in Outlook. Similarly, you can set up your out-of-office status in Outlook, and it will be reflected in Teams; however, the former has a more straightforward instruction.

First, you can click on your profile icon in Teams and go directly to Schedule an out of office, as a shortcut. This will take you to the settings area where you can proceed. You can also click the three-dot icon next to your profile icon, then go to Settings > General, then scroll down to the bottom of the page. There, you'll find out-of-office settings and click Schedule.

Read more