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Reviews of NVIDIA GeForce GTX Titan X 12GB GDDR5 PCIe

Testseek.com have collected 327 expert reviews of the NVIDIA GeForce GTX Titan X 12GB GDDR5 PCIe and the average rating is 87%. Scroll down and see all reviews for NVIDIA GeForce GTX Titan X 12GB GDDR5 PCIe.
Award: Editor’s Choice March 2015
March 2015
 
(87%)
327 Reviews
Users
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0 Reviews
87 0 100 327

The editors liked

  • Impressive 4K gaming performance
  • Efficient highend GPU
  • Stays quiet
  • Overclocks like a boss
  • Peerless performance
  • Amazingly well built
  • Enough power for true 4K gaming

The editors didn't like

  • Performance isn't unprecedented
  • Not taken by the black shroud
  • Prohibitively expensive
  • Very expensive
  • Overshadowed by potential SLI competitors
  • No 3rd party extras

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Reviews

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  Published: 2016-08-04, review by: tweaktown.com

  • I don't even know where to start with my final thoughts on the NVIDIA Titan X. It's just an incredible card that kind of, but not totally earns its $1200 price tag. The GeForce GTX 1080 Founders Edition is $699, while the Titan X is 71.6% more expensive...

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(94%)
 
  Published: 2016-08-02, Author: Gordon , review by: goodgearguide.com.au

  • We won't make any final judgments on the new Titan X until we've successfully ripped one from the guts of a machine for further testing, but I think we can reach a few conclusions from these tests. No surprise: A dual Titan X setup isn't worth it for the...

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  Published: 2015-07-01, review by: pcauthority.com.au

  • "If you want a product that doesn't need updated multi-GPU drivers to thrive, the Titan X is the one. "...

 
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(100%)
 
  Published: 2015-04-02, Author: Campbell , review by: gizmodo.com.au

  • Peerless performance, Amazingly well built, Enough power for true 4K gaming
  • Very expensive, Overshadowed by potential SLI competitors, No 3rd party extras
  • The Titan X is the top single-GPU graphics card of today — there's no doubt whatsoever about that. It's hugely powerful, and to that end it can push out 60fps smooth performance at Ultra HD resolutions, as long as you have an appropriately expensive monit...

 
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(90%)
 
  Published: 2015-03-18, Author: Anthony , review by: tweaktown.com

  • NVIDIA has done it again. We knew that NVIDIA had a full GM200 core coming after the GM204 was what made the GTX 980 come to life, but we didn't expect it to be this good. I knew it was coming, but another thing that surprised me was the 12GB of VRAM. NV...

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(93%)
 
  Published: 2015-03-17, Author: Dave , review by: techradar.com/au/

  • Impressive 4K gaming performance, Efficient highend GPU, Stays quiet, Overclocks like a boss
  • Performance isn't unprecedented, Not taken by the black shroud, Prohibitively expensive
  • This is the fastest single GPU card around, offering performance only before seen in monstrously power hungry dual-GPU cards, but now in an elegant, efficient package....

 
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(90%)
 
  Published: 2016-12-13, Author: Matthew , review by: pcmag.com

  • Unparalleled single-GPU performance, Equipped with 12GB of video memory, Generally cool and quiet
  • Absurdly expensive, High power demands
  • If you can justify the Pascal Titan X in your budget, it will provide the hands-down best gaming performance of any graphics card ever made...

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(80%)
 
  Published: 2016-12-05, Author: Josh , review by: computershopper.com

  • Unbelievable performance in a single GPU, Cool and quiet for the most part, 12GB of memory
  • Exorbitant price, Uses much more power than GTX 1080
  • The Titan X is ridiculously powerful and by far the fastest single GPU available. Talk to your loan officer about one today. Read More...

 
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(80%)
 
  Published: 2016-10-26, Author: Steve , review by: gamersnexus.net

  • Just to sort of re-iterate the Hybrid research content, nVidia is operating at spec for its clock-rate, but the spec could actually be higher with a superior cooler. Just changing to a liquid cooler increased our average FPS by about 3.5% to 5%, depending on the title – and that's with no overclock. It feels almost wasteful to use the reference cooler on the GTX Titan X, and with a limited supply of AIB partner variants, that's going to be the most common model. The Titan XP is still priced north of $1000, for the most part, with the GTX 1080 resting closer to $700. In its absolute best performing scenarios, the Titan XP is able to outperform a GTX 1080 FE by roughly 30%, and posts best-case gains over AIB partner 1080s upwards of 25%. But we've got to keep the bigger picture in mind: A GTX 1080 is already capable of running almost every game we've tested at 4K with roughly 60FPS framerates. For most enthusiasts at the high-end, we'd wager that's enough. An extra $300 doesn't gain a tangible framerate improvement at this point, since we're already so high in FPS output at 1440p and in some 4K scenarios. For the most part, the GTX 1080 makes more sense as a top-of-the-line gaming card. The Titan XP may make more sense for render and CUDA accelerated applications, once more fully support the Pascal architecture. The extra VRAM is the biggest differentiator and will stretch its legs more thoroughly in animation and CUDA-accelerated renders.

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  Published: 2016-10-07, Author: Sebastian , review by: notebookcheck.net

  • the Nvidia Titan X - the fastest consumer desktop GPU so farWe have deliberately ignored the price performance ratio since a price of 1299 Euros (~$1446), which Nvidia charges for their consumer range flagship, cannot be called reasonable at all. Neverthe...

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