3 MIN READ TIME

MSI GeForce RT X 4070 Ti Super 16G Ventus 3X

IT GENUINELY FEELS like we’re turning a corner in the world of PC gaming. Finally, we’re leaving the shackles of 1080p behind, and heading to the clear, glossycoated clarity of 1440p and beyond. The likes of the RTX 4070 Super and 4070 Ti Super really do cement that notion. In fact, the entire Super range with either identical pricing and increased hardware, or similar hardware and significantly reduced pricing, is definitely a good thing.

So then, what card do we have on the chopping block this time? Well, this, as you’ve probably already spotted, is the MSI GeForce RTX 4070 Ti Super 16G Ventus 3X (seriously MSI, we need shorter names, come on now). Unfortunately, the 4070 Ti Super doesn’t quite have the same glamor as the other GPUs in Nvidia’s lineup, as it lacks a stock Founders Edition variant, so if you’re on the hunt for a clean-looking black fan solution, you’re going to be looking at other models, which is a shame. That said, there are a number of cards out there that look the part, and the MSI variant here certainly does that.

Before we get there, though, let’s talk about the past, namely how the 4070 Ti came to be. At the initial launch of the RTX 40 series cards, Nvidia pitched not one, but two RTX 4080s. One, the full-fat 16GB VRAM, 9728 CUDA core monster we all know and love, and the other a 12GB variant, complete with fewer CUDA cores (and hardware, for that matter). Frankly, it was a bit ridiculous, and was inevitably going to lead to confusion down the line. The community and media revolted, and Nvidia pulled the launch and rebadged all those 12GB variants with the 4070 Ti moniker instead a few months later.

The problem was that the 4070 Ti was a bit of a mediocre jack of all trades— slightly overkill for 1440p, and a bit ‘meh’ for 4K, as it lacked the necessary VRAM to give it any length of future-proofing, leading many analysts to be disappointed with it (ourselves included).

Fast-forward a year, and the Super cards are announced, along with the Ti Super. Interestingly, each card represents a significantly different strategy to one another. The standard 4070 Super features the same VRAM, and the same price, but 20 percent more hardware. The 4080 Super features five percent more hardware, and a $200 price drop, yet more interestingly, the Ti Super bridges the gap with 10 percent more hardware, the same price, and, you guessed it, a bump up to 16GB of VRAM— arguably what it should have launched with initially.

Unlock this article and much more with
You can enjoy:
Enjoy this edition in full
Instant access to 600+ titles
Thousands of back issues
No contract or commitment
Try for 99c
SUBSCRIBE NOW
30 day trial, then just $9.99 / month. Cancel anytime. New subscribers only.


Learn more
Pocketmags Plus
Pocketmags Plus

This article is from...


View Issues
Maximum PC
April 2024
VIEW IN STORE

Other Articles in this Issue


QUICKSTART
THE NEWS
Intel’s new monster
AI ROBOT ATTRACTS BIG INVESTORS
FIGURE AI is a start-up robotics company that
TRANSPARENT LAPTOP
LENOVO has proved rumors true and built a
AMD LAUNCHES RADEON RX 7900 GRE
$549 gets you 16GB for gaming
INTEL’S BIG BET
CEO says 18A is the “biggest bet we have ever made”
Smell-O-Game
©PAT_GELSINGER.JPG/WIKIMEDIA AMAZON IF YOU’VE EVER WONDERED whether what
AMD’s RX 7900 GRE goes worldwide
TECH TALK
THE LIST
THE BEST CPUS FOR GAMING
Why are graphics drivers so hard?
TRADE CHAT
LETTERS
DOCTOR
THIS MONTH THE DOCTOR TACKLES...
MAXIMUM FLOW THE 4070 Ti SUPER
The perfect balance of RGB and style
Hardware Heaven, con’t
SSD 2TB Kingston Fury Renegade M.2 PCIe 4.0
Go With The Flow
LENGTH OF TIME: 2 HOURS LEVEL OF DIFFICULTY:
The future of cable management?
Is there a better way? The BTF form factor says ‘maybe’
LETTERS WE TACKLE TOUGH READER QUESTIONS ON...
> All-AMD Build > Windows Where? > UK
THE BUILDS THIS MONTH’S STREET PRICES...
BUDGET IF THIS MONTH has taught us anything,
MAXIMUMPC
BUILD YOUR OWN NAS 2024
Build your own fast, low-powered, 24/7 server with the help of Nick Peers
CENTERFOLD PERFORMANCE GEAR LAID BARE
Nvidia GeForce RTX 4080 Super LONG AGO, before
STATE OF THE PC INTEGRATED GRAPHICS
Can you get by without a dedicated GPU?
SUBSCRIBE TODAY
PC BUILD GUIDE
Strap in as we divulge 20 more tips on how to become the next master PC builder
R&D
HOW TO STEP-BY-STEP GUIDES TO IMPROVING YOUR PC
TIP OF THE MONTH
AUTOPSY THIS MONTH WE DISSECT...
While the Vision Pro does offer some modularity,
Use an open-source password manager
YOU’LL NEED THIS
Control your settings with the Nvidia app
YOU’LL NEED THIS
Make Shortwave your AI Assistant
YOU’LL NEED THIS
Turn on hidden Windows tools
YOU’LL NEED THIS
LAB NOTES JEREMY LAIRD, CONTRIBUTOR
Size matters, but not like that
Editor’s Pick: Asus ROG Strix XG27ACS
The monitor you’ve been waiting for?
IN THE LAB
AMD Radeon RX 7600 XT
As cost-effective as an RTX 4080 Super
AMD Ryzen 7 8700G
1080p gaming with integrated graphics? Hell, yes
Dough Spectrum One
As stunning as Dough’s original glossy display
Lenovo Legion Go
A handheld gaming PC, just on a larger scale
Hyte Y40
Traditional design meets Hyte
2TB Crucial T500 M.2 PCIe 4.0 SSD
The best budget 4.0 drive?
32GB Corsair Dominator Titanium DDR5
All the bells and whistles
Benq X3100i
Chunky 4K brilliance
Helldivers 2
Bombastic, funny, and challenging, but still a bit buggy
WhatsApp vs Signal
Which secure messaging app is the winner?
ADVERTISEMENT
Hardware Heaven
CPU AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D The Ryzen 7 7800X3D
Tech Triumphs and Tragedies
Chat
X
Pocketmags Support