Galax GeForce RTX 4070 Super EX is an affordable yet premium-looking custom-design graphics card based on NVIDIA's recently announced performance segment GPU. This card is also available with an identical name and model identifier, but under the KFA2 brand, in some markets. The GeForce RTX 4070 Super is part of a three-model refresh by NVIDIA this January, for the higher end of its GeForce RTX 40-series Ada family. It aims to improve the performance and competitiveness of the GeForce RTX brand at the $600 price-point that was previously held by the original RTX 4070, which had been embattled by AMD's recent introduction of the Radeon RX 7800 XT. The "Super" brand extension denotes an increase in performance at given price points without a change in the underlying technology. NVIDIA tends to roll these GPUs out one year into the lifecycle of a GPU generation.
The GeForce RTX 4070 Super continues to be based on the same 5 nm AD104 silicon powering the original RTX 4070 and RTX 4070 Ti, but is closer to the latter in specs, particularly with its shader count. The original RTX 4070 only enabled 46 out of 60 streaming multiprocessors (SM) present on the AD104, or just over three-quarters of it. The RTX 4070 Ti maxes out all 60 SMs, but was $800 at launch. The new RTX 4070 Super enables 56 out of 60 SM, or 93% of the available shaders. Compared to the original RTX 4070, this marks a neat 21% increase in CUDA cores, RT cores, Tensor cores, and TMUs. That's not all, the RTX 4070 Super gets all 48 MB of L2 cache available on the AD104 silicon, the original RTX 4070 only has 36 MB of it; and there's even an increase in the ROP count—the RTX 4070 only had 64 out of 80 ROPs enabled; while the RTX 4070 Super, like the RTX 4070 Ti, has all 80 of them enabled.
With 56 SMs on tap, the GeForce RTX 4070 Super enjoys 7,168 CUDA cores, 224 Tensor cores, 56 RT cores, 224 TMUs, and 80 ROPs, besides all 48 MB of L2 cache. The memory sub-system is carried over from the original, you get 12 GB of GDDR6X memory across a 192-bit memory interface, running at 21 Gbps, for 504 GB/s of memory bandwidth on tap. The increased shader counts, and slightly higher GPU clocks have meant that NVIDIA has had to increase the total graphics power (TGP) of the RTX 4070 Super, to 220 W, up from 200 W for the RTX 4070; but which is still less than the lavish 285 W enjoyed by the RTX 4070 Ti. Even this bit of increase has meant that NVIDIA's board partners can no longer opt for a single 8-pin PCIe power connector configuration, and all cards, including the Galax we're reviewing today, come with a 16-pin 12VHPWR power connector, and an NVIDIA-designed adapter that converts two 8-pin PCIe to a 300 W-rated 12VHPWR.
As we mentioned before, the underlying Ada graphics architecture is unchanged. Designed to take advantage of the 5 nm EUV foundry node, Ada introduces a new generation CUDA core with increased IPC, and support for shader-execution reordering, which improves ray tracing performance; the new 3rd generation RT core that supports displaced micro-meshes that allow game designers to increase complexity of ray traced objects; and the new optical flow accelerator component, which enables DLSS 3 Frame Generation, a path-breaking feature that lets the GPU draw entire alternate frames using AI, without involving the main graphics rendering machinery. NVIDIA has also re-architected the memory sub-system for this generation, by placing a nearly 10-times larger fast on-die L2 cache on the GPU, which reduces round-trips to the video memory by a significant enough amount to allow NVIDIA to narrow down the memory bus to 192-bit (compared to something like the previous-gen RTX 3070 Ti, which enjoyed 256-bit). This narrower memory bus drives memory chips of generationally increased density, which is how the card has 12 GB.
The Galax RTX 4070 Super EX sports a premium appearance, with a triple-slot design, and cooler that looks like it's from a segment above. It uses an aluminium fin-stack heatsink with three heatpipes; and a trio of fans. The one in the middle is slightly larger 102 mm than the ones on the sides, at 92 mm, each. The three fans, along with a GeForce RTX logo on the topside of the cooler shroud, are RGB LED illuminated, and you can control it using the Galax Xtreme Tuner app. The card has its own RGB controller; but also puts out a 3-pin addressable RGB header, so you can sync the rest of your lighting to the card. The Galax EX comes with a handy factory overclock of 2565 MHz out of the box, compared to 2475 MHz reference. The card is priced at $615, an acceptable $15 premium over the NVIDIA baseline price.
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 Super Market Segment Analysis