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EVGA Geforce GTX 1660 Ti XC Ultra: Laser-focused on all-around great performanc­e

The EVGA Geforce GTX 1660 Ti XC Ultra strips out fancy extras to focus purely on great performanc­e in all functional areas.

- BY BRAD CHACOS

The EVGA Geforce GTX 1660 Ti XC Ultra we’re testing today strikes a balanced compromise. Nvidia’s $280 Geforce GTX 1660 Ti is the best GPU you can buy for 1080p gaming, full stop. It’s an enticing option for 1440p gaming too, usurping the last-gen GTX 1070 that debuted at nearly $100 more.

But while Nvidia offers its own “Founders Edition” graphics cards for all RTX 20-series GPUS, it’s skipping direct consumer sales for

the return of the

GTX brand. That means the

Geforce GTX 1660

Ti’s launch consists solely of models sold by Nvidia’s board partners, each with its own unique spin.

We’ve already reviewed the Asus

ROG Strix GTX

1660 Ti ( go. pcworld.com/ gf16) and fell in love with its borderline overkill custom cooler and abundant features. But at

$330, the tripleslot behemoth commands a steep $50 price premium. The

EVGA Geforce GTX 1660 Ti XC Ultra we’re testing today offers a hefty overclock like the Asus ROG Strix and a customized dual-fan cooler of its own, but in a more accommodat­ing dual-slot design—and for $20 less.

Can EVGA’S GTX 1660 Ti XC Ultra ($310 on Amazon ( go.pcworld.com/am16) or Newegg ( go.pcworld.com/ne16)) impress even with less raw heavy metal than the mammoth ROG Strix? Spoiler alert: Yep. Let’s dig in.

MEET THE EVGA GTX 1660 TI XC ULTRA

Before we dig into EVGA’S customizat­ions, here’s a quick refresher on the Geforce GTX

1660 Ti’s core tech specs. Highlights include a massive jump in overall memory bandwidth thanks to an upgrade to ultra-fast GDDR6 VRAM, and a massive upgrade in Turing Gpu-enhanced CUDA cores ( go.pcworld.com/ turi), all at the same 120-watt TDP as the older GTX 1060. Spectacula­r stuff—though note that all GTX 1660 Ti models lack the dedicated ray tracing and AI hardware found in the pricier RTX 20-series GPUS.

The EVGA GTX 1660 Ti sticks to the reference specificat­ions with one key exception: the GPU clock speed. EVGA’S card claims the same 1,860MHZ boost clock speed as the ROG Strix, a sizeable 90MHZ increase over the reference spec. Also like the ROG Strix, the EVGA GTX 1660 Ti XC Ultra actually soars even higher out of the box, maintainin­g clock speeds around 1,935MHZ to 1,950MHZ in most games. It’s fast.

EVGA’S graphics card maintains those supercharg­ed clock speeds thanks to its potent custom cooler. The Geforce GTX

1660 Ti XC Ultra includes the overhauled custom cooling design found on many of EVGA’S RTX 20-series GPUS. Dual hydraulic dynamic bearing (HDB) axial fans emblazoned with tiny “E”s sit atop a deep, dense heat sink, and EVGA claims that the mixture of HDB fans with the tiny letters result in a 19 percent reduction in noise levels compared to competing fans with sleeve-bearing fan designs. We can’t quantify that ourselves, but there’s no question that the EVGA GTX 1660 Ti XC Ultra runs pretty quietly for such a potent graphics card.

The custom cooler wasn’t the only thing EVGA redesigned from the ground up for this generation. The company’s Precision X1 software ( go.pcworld.com/prx1) has evolved into one of the slickest and easiest-to-use overclocki­ng tools available, with everything you need to push your GPU to new heights— including dead-simple one-button automatic overclocki­ng for folks who don’t like to get their hands dirty. It’s highly recommende­d if you have any interest in tinkering with your graphics card.

Returning to physical design, the EVGA

GTX 1660 Ti XC Ultra sticks to basic port options, limiting itself to solitary HDMI, Displaypor­t, and dual-link DVI connection­s— though we’re very happy to see the latter whatsoever. By comparison, the Asus ROG Strix dumps DVI, but doubles up on HDMI and Displaypor­ts. EVGA’S card measures 10.5 power connection, so it should have no problem slipping into the vast majority of gaming PCS.

Wrapping things up, it’s worth noting a few omissions on EVGA’S card, RGB LEDS being the most glaring. We’re fine with the decision, but it’s increasing­ly rare to see a modern graphics card without flashing lights. The card also lacks a backplate, but that’s not really a negative either—just a point worth mentioning given that this is EVGA’S highestend GTX 1660 Ti offering.

But enough tech spec talk! Let’s take the EVGA GTX 1660 Ti XC Ultra to the test bench.

OUR TEST SYSTEM

Our dedicated graphics card test system is packed with some of the fastest complement­ary components available to put any potential performanc­e bottleneck­s squarely on the GPU. Most of the hardware was provided by the manufactur­ers, but we purchased the cooler and storage ourselves.

• Intel Core i7-8700k processor ($360 on Amazon at go.pcworld.com/700k)

• EVGA CLC 240 closed-loop liquid cooler ($120 on Amazon at go.pcworld.com/c240)

• Asus Maximus X Hero motherboar­d ($260 on Amazon at go.pcworld.com/mxmc)

• 64GB Hyperx Predator RGB DDR4/2933 ($416 for 32GB on Amazon at go.pcworld.com/hxpr)

• EVGA 1200W Supernova P2 power supply ($180 on Amazon at go.pcworld. com/spnv)

• Corsair Crystal 570X RGB case, with front and top panels removed and an extra rear fan installed for improved airflow ($170 on Amazon at go.pcworld.com/crst)

• 2x 500GB Samsung 860 EVO SSDS ($100 on Amazon at go.pcworld.com/smev) We’re comparing the $310 EVGA GTX 1660 Ti XC Ultra against the $330 Asus ROG Strix GTX 1660 Ti, as well as its predecesso­r, an overclocke­d EVGA version of the 6GB GTX 1060. Rounding out the Nvidia side, we’re also including the GTX 1070 Founders Edition and the ray tracing-capable $350 Geforce

RTX 2060 Founders Edition.

To see how EVGA’S graphics card stacks up against the Radeon competitio­n, we’re also included performanc­e results from the $260 Sapphire Radeon RX 590 Nitro+ ( go.pcworld. com/590n) (which launched at $280 in November), the $400 Radeon Vega 56, and the Asus ROG Strix version of the Radeon RX 580. Many Radeon RX 580 models can consistent­ly be found for under $200 on sale these days, even in 8GB variants.

Each game is tested using its in-game benchmark at the highest possible graphics presets, with Vsync, frame rate caps, and all GPU vendor-specific technologi­es—like AMD Tressfx, Nvidia Gameworks options, and Freesync/g-sync—disabled, and temporal anti-aliasing (TAA) enabled to push these high-end cards to their limits. If anything differs from that, we’ll mention it. We run each benchmark at least three times and list the average result for each test.

We limited our testing to 1080p and 1440p resolution­s, as satisfying 4K gaming is mostly out of the reach of this class of card. Because the EVGA GTX 1660 Ti’s gaming performanc­e results largely mirror the Asus ROG Strix GTX 1660 Ti’s—it’s a clear Radeon RX 590 killer—we’ll refrain from commentary until the power and thermals section, where difference­s between the two GTX 1660 Ti models become more clear.

GAMING BENCHMARKS Strange Brigade

Let’s kick things off with Strange Brigade ($50 on Humble at go.pcworld.com/bysb), a cooperativ­e third-person shooter where a team of adventurer­s blast through hordes of mythologic­al enemies. It’s a technologi­cal showcase, built around the next-gen Vulkan and Directx 12 technologi­es and infused with features like HDR support and the ability to toggle asynchrono­us compute on and off. It uses Rebellion’s custom Azure engine. We test with async compute off.

Shadow of the Tomb Raider

Shadow of the Tomb Raider

($60 on Humble at go.pcworld.com/shdw) concludes the reboot trilogy, and it’s gorgeous —even the state-of-the-art Geforce RTX 2080 Ti barely manages to average 60 fps with all the bells and whistles turned on at 4K resolution. Square Enix optimized this game for DX12, and recommends DX11 only if you’re using older hardware or Windows 7, so we test with that. Shadow of the Tomb Raider

uses an enhanced version of the Foundation engine that also powered Rise of the Tomb Raider.

Far Cry 5

Finally, a Directx 11 game! Far Cry 5 ($60 on Humble at go.pcworld.com/fcr5) is powered by Ubisoft’s longestabl­ished Dunia engine. It’s just as gorgeous as its predecesso­rs were, and even more fun.

Ghost Recon Wildlands

Move over, Crysis. If you crank all the graphics options up to 11, like we do for these tests, Ghost Recon Wildlands ($50 on Humble at go.pcworld.com/ recn) and its Anvilnext 2.0 engine absolutely melts GPUS. Ghost Recon Wildlands also prefers Nvidia’s GPU architectu­re in general.

Middle-earth: Shadow of War

Middle-earth: Shadow of War ($50 on Humble at go.pcworld.com/shwr) adds a strategic layer to the series’ sublime core gameplay loop, adapting the Nemesis system to let you create an army of personaliz­ed Orc commanders. It plays like a champ on PC, too, thanks to Monolith’s custom Lithtech Firebird engine. We use the Ultra graphics preset but drop the Shadow and Texture Quality settings to High to avoid exceeding 8GB of VRAM usage in our testing scenario, because graphics cards that exceed 8GB of capacity are rare indeed.

F1 2018

The latest in a long line of successful games, F1 2018 ($60 on Humble at go.pcworld.com/ f118) is a benchmarki­ng gem, supplying a wide array of both graphical and benchmarki­ng options—making it a much more reliable option that the Forza series. It’s built on the fourth version of Codemaster­s’ butterysmo­oth Ego game engine. We test two laps on the Australia course, with clear skies.

Ashes of the Singularit­y: Escalation

Ashes of the Singularit­y ($40 on Humble at go.pcworld.com/ sing) was one of the very first DX12 games, and it remains a flag-bearer for the technology to this day thanks to the extreme scalabilit­y of Oxide Games’ next-gen Nitrous engine. With hundreds of units onscreen simultaneo­usly and some serious graphics effects in play, the Crazy preset can make graphics cards sweat. Ashes runs in both DX11 and DX12, but we only test in DX12, as it delivers the best results for both Nvidia and AMD GPUS.

GTA V

We’re going to wrap things up with a couple of older games that aren’t really visual barnburner­s, but still top the Steam charts day in and day out.

These are games that a lot of people play. First up: Grand Theft Auto V ($30 on Humble at go.pcworld.com/gta5) with all options turned to Very High, all Advanced Graphics options except extended shadows enabled, and FXAA. GTA V runs on the RAGE engine and has received substantia­l updates since its initial launch.

Rainbow Six Siege

Let’s take a peek at Rainbow Six Siege ($40 on Humble at go.pcworld.com/rnss), a game whose audience just keeps on growing, and one that still feels like the only truly next-gen shooter ( go.pcworld. com/rain) after all these years. Like Ghost Recon Wildlands, this game runs on Ubisoft’s Anvilnext 2.0 engine, but Rainbow Six Siege responds especially well to graphics cards that lean on async compute features.

POWER DRAW, THERMALS, AND NOISE

We also tested the Sapphire Radeon RX 590+ using 3Dmark’s highly respected Fire Strike synthetic benchmark. Fire Strike runs at 1080p, Fire Strike

Extreme runs at 1440p, and Fire Strike Ultra runs at 4K resolution. All render the same scene, but with more intense graphical effects as you move up the scale, so that Extreme and Ultra flavors stress GPUS even more. We record the graphics score to eliminate variance from the CPU.

This is why you can’t test cards based solely on synthetic benchmarks, though they’re wonderful for relative sanity checks and competitiv­e overclocki­ng contests.

According to Fire Strike, the GTX 1660 Ti is slower than the Radeon RX 590, and well behind the GTX 1070. That simply isn’t true in actual games.

We test power draw by looping the F1 2018 benchmark for about 20 minutes after we’ve benchmarke­d everything else, and noting the highest reading on our Watts Up Pro meter. The

initial part of the race, where all competing cars are onscreen simultaneo­usly, tends to be the most demanding portion. The GTX 1660 Ti is yet another testament to Nvidia’s clear power efficiency domination, drawing far less energy than its Radeon rivals, and roughly the same amount of power as the GTX 1060 while delivering far more performanc­e per watt.

We test thermals by leaving Hwinfo’s sensor monitoring tool open during the F1 2018 5-lap power draw test, noting the highest maximum temperatur­e at the end.

Here’s the biggest pure performanc­e difference between the two GTX 1660 Ti models we’ve tested, the Asus ROG Strix and EVGA’S XC Ultra. The massive ROG Strix runs ice-cold with very little fan noise, or utterly silently with the card’s Quiet BIOS. But achieving that requires a massive triple-slot, triple-fan cooler and a steeper price premium. The EVGA GTX 1660 Ti XC Ultra still delivers some of the lowest GPU temperatur­es in this performanc­e class, it runs very quietly itself, and it does so in a more flexible dual-slot cooler design. They’re both winners, albeit in very different ways.

BOTTOM LINE

If you’re looking for a great graphics card that will let you game at high frame rates and no visual compromise­s at 1080p resolution, the $310 EVGA GTX 1660 Ti XC Ultra should be on your short list. It’s powerful enough for 1440p gaming, too, and would make a sublime pairing with a G-sync or Freesync variable refresh rate monitor. EVGA’S built a very compelling graphics card built around a very compelling Gpu—one that utterly dismantles rival AMD Radeon RX 590 options, and one that renders the GTX 1070 obsolete unless you find one on a massive sale.

The XC Ultra justifies its $30 premium over baseline GTX 1660 Ti models thanks to its hefty overclock and potent custom cooling system. GPU clock speeds hover around 2GHZ in most gaming scenarios, and EVGA’S cooling solution runs chilly and quiet while maintainin­g a reasonable dual-slot design that should have no trouble fitting in most gaming PCS. The need for only a single 8-pin power

connection adds to its versatilit­y.

It’s lacking in luxurious extras, however. The XC Ultra doesn’t include RGB LEDS or a backplate, let alone performanc­e-altering features like the dual-bios switch, adaptive fan headers, and discrete LED button found on the Asus ROG Strix GTX 1660 Ti ( go.pcworld.com/gf16). The Strix’s monstrous triple-slot, triple-fan cooler won’t fit in all cases, however, and it costs $330—$20 more than the XC Ultra, and a full $50 more than the GTX 1660 Ti’s baseline MSRP.

You can’t go wrong with either of these cards. The Asus ROG Strix is a big, badass, and borderline overkill graphics card built for the proverbial 1 percent who want all the bells and whistles and don’t mind paying extra for them.

EVGA’S card is probably better for most people. It delivers a high level of performanc­e similar to the Strix, with a great cooling solution, but avoids extravagan­t extras to keep the price from getting too high. Plus, it offers an all-too-rare DVI connection.

The EVGA GTX 1660 Ti XC Ultra is fast, cool, quiet, energy-efficient, and broadly compatible—a killer combinatio­n. And the company’s superb Precision X1 overclocki­ng software serves as a delicious cherry on top. It’s a great graphics card.

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 ??  ?? The EVGA GTX 1660 Ti XC Ultra is a high-performing, well-rounded graphics card.
The EVGA GTX 1660 Ti XC Ultra is a high-performing, well-rounded graphics card.

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