Colorful iGame GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Vulcan X OC 11 GB Graphics Card Review – Vulcan 2.0 With Fully Functional LCD

It’s been months since NVIDIA released their Turing based GeForce RTX 20 series graphics cards. Taking a complete departure from traditional GPU design and creating a hybrid architecture that includes a range of new technologies to power the next-generation immersive gaming experiences.

The key highlight of the GeForce RTX 20 series was the enablement of real-time raytracing which is the holy grail of graphics and something NVIDIA spent 10 years to perfect. In addition to raytracing, NVIDIA also aims to place bets on AI which will play a key role in powering features such as DLSS or Deep Learning Super Sampling, a unique way of offering the same quality as the more taxing MSAA AA techniques at twice the performance.

I’ve looked and compared the performance of several GeForce RTX 2080 Ti and GeForce RTX 2080 custom variants and consider them to be a good gain over their predecessors, the GTX 1080 Ti and GTX 1080. When it comes to pricing, the GeForce RTX 20 series are some of the most costly graphics cards NVIDIA has offered to consumers. The reference variants are great with their new cooling design and good looking shrouds but AIBs have some really great custom solutions out there, several of which I have already compared next to each other and with the reference variants.

With just a few bucks of asking price over the reference models, the custom variants offer a range of features such as triple fan coolers, bulky heatsinks, and custom PCBs allowing for better heat dissipation, higher air flow and more overclocking performance and clock stability at their respective boost clocks which will be higher compared to the reference variants. The main wall with overclocking is by far the power limit and those that offer the highest power limits out of the box are generally the ones with the best overclocking potential and performance output.

Colorful Technology is one company who is offering such a high-end model based around the RTX 2080 Ti graphics card. Colorful is a widely popular name in the enthusiast market, especially since they are the biggest NVIDIA AIB partner in the Asian Pacific market and China. Their iGame brand for graphics cards is expanded into various lineups that include Vulcan, Kudan, Neptune and more. All of these graphics cards are known to offer some of the most unique designs in the industry. It should be mentioned that Colorful recently held their CGU 2019 event in China and launched their latest iGame RTX 2080 Ti KUDAN which looks spectacular and unlike anything we have seen before in the graphics industry. What’s special about that card aside from looking great is that it marks the 10 year anniversary of the iGame brand.

So it looks like it cannot be a better time to test the latest Colorful iGame RTX 2080 TI Vulcan X OC graphics card then now. This is one of the top variants, just beneath the KUDAN, that Colorful is offering at the moment and has some impressive specifications which I am really looking forward to testing.

In case you want to read our full NVIDIA Turing GPU architecture deep dive and GeForce RTX 2080 & GeForce RTX 2080 Founders Edition review, head over to this link.

The Colorful iGame GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Vulcan X OC is Colorful’s fully custom PCB, custom cooler design. The Colorful iGame Vulcan X OC design makes use of every bit of power that it sips for unprecedented amounts of performance and overclocking potential. The Colorful iGame GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Vulcan X OC will be selling at $1399.99 US which is a $200 premium over Founders Edition variants.

The Colorful iGame Vulcan X OC packs a 16+3 phase IPP (iGame Pure Power) VRM design that is designed with silver plating technology to ensure faster current transfer without power losses. These high-end components also can also withstand higher electrical impedance, lower EMI and provide higher stability when in operation.

NVIDIA states that their new reference PCB allows for more power headroom of around 55W. That is where the 325W figure is coming from. The new electrical components also ensure much cleaner power delivery, allowing for better overclocks without wasting excess power. However, the iGame provides even higher headroom thanks to the custom PCB design and a monstrous triple eight-pin power connector configuration which will allow for better overclocking over Founders Edition card.

In terms of clock speeds, the graphics card features the same base frequency of 1350 MHz but the boost clock is rated at up to 1770 MHz over the Founders boost of 1635 MHz (+135 MHz overclock). But that’s just the tip of the iceberg when running in Turbo mode, the chip unlocks its full output of a massive 1440 MHz base and 1820 MHz boost which is just incredible.

 

Following are some of the features of the Colorful iGame GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Vulcan X OC before we go into detail:

Features

  • iGame Series:
  • Colorful Dynamic Monitor2.0/
  • SPT
  • RGB light
  • I.P.P Power
  • Gen 2 One-Key OC
  • Intelligent start-stop fans

Core Clock

  • 1820 MHz in OC BIOS With Turbo Mode
  • 1770 MHz in OC BIOS
  • (Reference Card: 1545 MHz)

Colorful’s iGame Vulcan X OC Series – Upgraded With SWORIZER 2.0 Cooling System

I think the main thing that needs to be highlighted for the Colorful iGame Vulcan X OC is the unique design. The most notable in this aspect being the shroud which is an updated version of the previous Vulcan X OC graphics cards but features a more streamlined body with alloy casting armor, carved surfaces and textures on the outermost layers of the design that looks like an “X” but also resembled a tie fighter in some angles.

Within the shroud, Colorful has a smart temperature induction system which monitors the card temperatures in real-time. The data being generated can be seen in monitoring apps and iGame Zone II application which you can use in tandem with the LCD on the shroud, we will get to that in a bit.

There are three fans on the card which feature the Auto-Stop technology. This feature has become really popular as users can configure their cards for a totally silent operation or leave the cards running for higher clocks under load. With Auto-Stop, the Colorful iGame Vulcan X OC graphics card fans won’t spin unless they reach a certain threshold (60 Degrees Celcius).

Now coming to the main cooling system of the Vulcan X OC, the heatsink. The card uses a next-generation cooling system known as SWORIZER 2.0 which is upgraded from the GeForce 10 series cards. It includes several layers, compacted in a three-stage design that increases fins area and optimizes cooling performance. In addition to the triple stage aluminum fin array blocks, we can also note 6 heat pipes that run through the heatsink blocks, offering optimal heat transfer which can be dissipated by fans.

Also noteworthy is the iGame Vaccum Copper Plate which is the name for the base plate that connects the heatsink to the GPU die. The Vacuum copper plate has been filled with liquid that essentially makes it a vapor chamber, offering much better heat dissipation than standard cold blocks.

With the inner design discussed, let’s move back to the outer design and one of the key feature of the iGame Vulcan X OC series, the iGame Status Monitor 2.0. Yes, this is a full-color LCD which not only displays GPU data such as clocks, voltages, usage, temps, but it can also support text, pictures, and GIFs. It supports a 60 FPS colorful dynamic display which lets you go crazy with your creative skills and really customize your PC as you like.

Colorful also has a brilliant RGB implementation known as RGB Sparkle which can be used with their iGame Dynamik Light software. This allows you to control multiple RGB LED zones on the front and also on the back which look spectacular.

Finally, we told you the clock speeds come in standard and OC BIOS profiles and you must be wondering how to enable those profiles. Well, there’s a nice button on the back of the card that does it for you. A simple click of the button enables the OC BIOS and it even shows a blue light to confirm that the OC BIOS is enabled.

The Colorful iGame GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Vulcan X OC graphics cards come in a standard cardboard box package. The front of both packages has a large “GeForce RTX” branding along with a “Vulcan” logo on the top right corner and the iGame branding logo on the top left corner. The box comes in a reflective material which looks really cool.

The packaging has put a large emphasis on the RTX side of things as the first feature enlisted by AIBs will be Ray Tracing, followed by GDDR6, DirectX 12 and Ansel support. NVIDIA has bet the future of their gaming GPUs on Ray Tracing support as these are the first cards to offer support for the new feature.

The back of the box is very typical, highlighting the main features and specifications of the cards. The key aspects of Colorful’s Gaming custom cards are its Sworizer 2.0 cooling system, I.P.P iGame Pure Power VRM, SAW Sickle Fan design, iGame Status Monitor 2.0 and the iGame RGB Lighting system.

There’s also a focus towards GeForce.com on each AIB card through which users can download the latest drivers and GeForce Experience application which are a must for gamers to access all feature set of the new cards.

The sides of the box once again greet us with the large GeForce RTX branding. There’s also mention of the 11 GB GDDR6 (RTX 2080 Ti) memory available on the cards. The higher bandwidth delivered through the new GDDR6 interface would help improve performance in gaming titles at higher resolution over GDDR5 and GDDR5X based graphics cards.

Outside of the box, the graphics card and the accessory package are held firmly by foam packaging. The graphics card packs some really useful accessories that highlight its premium design.

The card is nicely wrapped within an anti-static cover which is useful to prevent any unwanted static discharges on various surfaces that might harm the graphics card. The card accessories include a Molex power connector which isn’t of much use in high-end systems since the PSUs already have the required cables.

Useful manuals and installation guides are packed within an iGame labeled letter case. There’s also a sticker case along with a handy multi-tool, a pair of gloves for keeping your card neat and clean and free of smudges or fingerprints when installing it and a nice array of screws which you can use with the multi-tool.

After the package taken care of, I can finally start talking about the card itself. This thing is a beast and I can’t wait to test it out to find what kind of performance improvement I get over current-gen cards.

Colorful’s iGame GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Vulcan X OC  rocks one of the beefiest heatsink solutions that I have ever tested. The card measure in at 318×147 x59 mm and comes in a triple slot design which should be expected of this flagship option. Compared to some other cards that I have tested like the MSI Gaming X Trio and the ASUS ROG STRIX, the iGame Vulcan X OC is slightly shorter but has more width to it which is used by the magnitude of components on the card.

You would have to keep in mind the height when going for a dual card solution as your case or motherboard PCIe slot combination may not allow such setup. The cooling shroud extends all the way to the back of the PCB and it requires a casing with good interior space for proper installation.

The back of the card features a solid backplate which looks stunning and offers a premium look. There’s a lot of nifty features about this backplate which I will come back to shortly.

In terms of design, we are looking at an updated version of the SWORIZER 2.0 series heatsink which is now in its seventh variation. The first SWORIZER based graphics card shipped last year with the iGame GeForce RTX 10 Vulcan X series but the new heatsink has been improved in many ways compared to its predecessor.

The new heatsink looks like a more sleeker variant of the previous SWORIZER with the main changes being the shroud and heatsink design. In addition to the heatsink and shroud changes, you also get a slight bit of RGB in the new shroud which is compliant with iGame Zone II RGB Fusion lighting system and is fully user-customizable.

Coming to the fans, the card actually features two different fan designs which utilize the Unique SAW Sickle Blade design. There are actually small shark fins curved into the main blade which increases the total volume of air being pushed by 7% and increases air pressure by up to 15%.

There are three Saw Sickle fans on the shroud which make use of a dual ball bearing design and are guaranteed to deliver 70,000 hours of working life.

The fans are fully compliant with the Auto Stop fan technology which will allow the fans to stay in idle mode until the temps exceed a certain threshold. This threshold is based on both the GPU load and the temperatures, allowing for smooth and quiet operation under lower application loads.

I am back at talking about the full-coverage, full metal-based backplate which both card use. The whole plate is made of solid metal with rounded edges that add to the durability of this card. The matte black finish on the backplate gives a unique aesthetic.

There are small cutouts in screw placements to easily reach the points on the graphics card. There are open vents for the hot air to move out from the back too. We can also see the iGame logo in the back. Not only does the logo support RGB LEDs but there’s an additional cut out to the front which also rocks RGB LEDs. Colorful is using heat pads on the bottom of the PCB to ensure better thermals and you can also note a nice black textured iGame name etched on the back of the plate.

Gone is SLI and now we have the latest NVLINK gold finger connectors. The RTX 2080 comes with a single NVLINK connector which allows for 2-Way multi-GPU functionality. The RTX 2080 Ti and RTX 2080 are the only cards to support NVLINK connectivity so multi-GPU is only for the high-end spectrum of cards and for good reason. Only these cards have enough bandwidth that can drive another GPU of their tier as anything below wouldn’t have the power to interlink to the other card.

A single x8 NVLINK channel provides 25 GB/s peak bandwidth. There are two x8 links on the TU102 GPU and a single x8 link on the Turing TU104 GPU. The TU102 GPU features 50 GB/s of bandwidth in parallel and 100 GB/s bandwidth bi-directionally. Using NVLINK on high-end cards would be beneficial in high-resolution gaming but there’s a reason NVIDIA still restricts users from doing 3 and 4 way SLI.

Multi-GPU still isn’t optimized so you won’t see much benefits unless you are running the highest end graphics cards. That’s another reason why the RTX 2070 is deprived of NVLINK connectors. The NVLINK connectors cost $79 US each and are sold separately. Currently, only NVIDIA is selling them as the AIB cards don’t include any such connectors but that may change once the standard is adopted widely.

With the outsides of the card done, I will now start taking a glance at what’s beneath the hood of these monster graphics cards. The first thing to catch my eye is the huge fin stack that’s part of the beefy heatsink which the cards utilize.

Talking about the heatsink, the massive block is a combination of three separate aluminum fins array blocks which are connected through 6 heat pipes.

The base of the heatsink is made of nickel-plated copper design and acts as a vapor chamber to offer higher heat dissipation from the GPU. You can also note various thermal heat pads across the heatsink which make contact with the memory dies, the VRM and MOSFETs.

The Colorful iGame GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Vulcan X OC comes with a massive factory overclock out of the box. Being so, it uses a triple 8 Pin connector configuration. There’s no official TDP which is mentioned by Colorful but those three 8 pin connectors alone can sip in 450W of power.

I/O on the graphics card sticks with the reference scheme which includes three Display Port 1.4a, a single HDMI 2.0b and a single USB Type-C port for VirtualLink connectivity to high-end HMD (Head Mounted Displays).

Colorful iGame GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Vulcan X OC Series PCB Teardown

Colorful makes use of a 16+3 phase PWM design that includes high-end I.P.P certified components with silver plating technology. The cards also use the MT61K256M32JE-14: A GDDR6 memory from Micron that operates at 14 Gbps along a 256-bit wide memory interface.

Following are a few close-up shots of the reference PCB which is being offered under the hood of the Gaming OC series graphics cards.

Colorful iGame GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Vulcan X OC Series RGB Lighting and LCD Gallery

Colorful iGame Vulcan X OC series cards utilize their iGame Zone II software technology to offer you a visually pleasing lighting experience on your graphics cards. There are multiple LED zones which you can configure with the main highlights being the front shroud and the backplate.

Following is what the graphics card looks like when lit up.

Similarly to the RGB Lighting, you can use the iGame Zone II application to customize the side LCD which can display various details of the cards through real-time monitoring. Or if you are more of the creative type, you can upload your own custom text, picture or GIF to the full-color LCD which stands out from the rest.

We used the following test system for comparison between the different graphics cards. Latest drivers that were available at the time of testing were used from AMD and NVIDIA on an updated version of Windows 10. All games that were tested were patched to the latest version for better performance optimization for NVIDIA and AMD GPUs.

GPU Test Bench 2018

CPU Intel Core i7-8700K @ 5.00 GHz
Motherboard AORUS Z370 Gaming 7
Video Cards ASUS ROG STRIX GeForce RTX 2080 TI OC
ASUS ROG STRIX GeForce RTX 2080 OC
AORUS GeForce RTX 2080 Xtreme
MSI GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Gaming X Trio
MSI GeForce RTX 2080 Gaming X Trio
MSI GeForce RTX 2080 DUKE OC
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Founders Edition
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 Founders Edition
MSI GeForce GTX 1080 Ti Gaming X Trio
MSI GeForce GTX 1080 Ti Lightning X
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 Founders Edition
MSI GeForce GTX 1070 Ti Titanium
MSI GeForce GTX 1070 Armor X OC
MSI GeForce GTX 980 Ti Lightning OC
Gigabyte Radeon RX Vega 64 (Reference Air)
XFX Radeon R9 Fury X Liquid Cooled
Memory G.SKILL Trident Z RGB Series 32GB (4 X 8GB) CL16 3600 MHz
Storage Samsung SSD 960 EVO M.2 (512 GB)
Power Supply Corsair AX1200i PSU
OS Windows 10 64-bit
  • All games were tested on 2560×1440 (2K) and 3840×2160 (4K) resolutions.
  • Image Quality and graphics configurations have been provided in the screenshots below.
  • The “reference” cards are the stock configs while the “overclock” cards are factory overclocked configs provided to us by various AIB partners.

Colorful iGame GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Vulcan X OC Overclocking

Since the card is clocked at overclocked specifications, we are kind of left with limited headroom to overclock. I pushed the core to +180 MHz beyond its overclock profile and +1075 MHz on the memory.

I had the power and temp target slider maxed out in EVGA Precision X1 so that meant that the GPU was under no restrictions or blocks when it came to overclocking. The clocks were stable after testing for an hour under stress load and the boost speeds were running around 2160-2220 MHz while gaming.

DOOM

In 2016, Id finally released DOOM. My testing wouldn’t be complete without including this title. All cards were capable of delivering ample frame rates at the 1440p resolution using Nightmare settings, so my focus turned to 4K.

Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus

Wolfenstein is back in The New Colossus and features the most fast-paced, gory and brutal FPS action ever! The game once again puts us back in the Nazi-controlled world as BJ Blazkowicz. Set during an alternate future where Nazis won the World War, the game shows that it can be fun and can be brutal to the player and to the enemy too. Powering the new title is once again, id Tech 6 which is much acclaimed after the success that DOOM has become. In a way, ID has regained their glorious FPS roots and are slaying with every new title.

Ultra HQ-AF, Vulkan, Async Compute On *if available, Deferred Rendering and GPU culling off

We tested the game at Ultra settings under the Vulkan API which is standard. Async Compute was enabled for graphics cards that support it while deferred rendering and GPU culling were disabled.

You can read our detailed analysis of GPU Culling and Deferred Rendering graphical settings for Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus here!

Ashes of The Singularity: Escalation

NVIDIA and AMD have been tweaking the performance of their cards for Ashes of the Singularity since the title released. It was the first to make use of the DirectX 12 API and the first to leverage from the new Async compute technology that makes use of the DX12 renderer to improve performance.

Battlefield 1

Battlefield 1 takes us back to the great war that was meant to end all wars aka World War 1. Using the latest Frostbite tech, the game does a good job at looking gorgeous in all ways possible. From the open world environments to the intense and gun-blazing action, this multiplayer and single player FPS title is one of the best Battlefields to date.

Deus Ex: Mankind Divided

Humanity is at war with itself and divided into factions. On one end, we have the pure and on the other, we have the augmented. That is the world where Adam Jensen lives in and this is the world of Deus Ex: Mankind Divided. The game uses the next generation Dawn Engine that was made by IO interactive on the foundation of their Glacier 2 engine. The game features support of DirectX 12 API and is one of the most visually intensive titles that taxes the GPU really hard.

Hitman (2016)

With the latest drivers, NVIDIA has managed to up the performance of their Pascal and Maxwell parts in Hitman (2016). The game has been a major win for AMD graphics cards that still show a strong gain in performance when switching over from DX11 to DX12, but NVIDIA is slowly catching up with their drivers.

Shadow of The Tomb Raider

The Rise of The Tomb Raider

The rise of the Tomb Raider is one of the most beautiful games that I have played recently and was patched to the DX12 API. The game features a wide variety of settings and we chose Very High, HBAO+ without any AA.

Assassins Creed: Origins

Assassins Creed Origins is built by the same team that made Assassins Creed IV: Black Flag. They are known for reinventing the design and game philosophy of the Assassins Creed saga and their latest title shows that. Based in Egypt, the open-world action RPG shows its graphics strength in all corners. It uses the AnvilNext 2.0 engine which boosts the draw distance range and delivers a very impressive graphics display.

We tested the game at maxed settings with TAA enabled and 16x AF. Do note that the game is one of the most demanding titles out in the market and as such tweaks and performance issues are being patched out.

Far Cry 5

Far Cry 5 is a standalone successor to its predecessor and takes place in Hope County, a fictional region of Montana. The main story revolves around doomsday cult the Project at Eden’s Gate and its charismatic leader Joseph Seed. It uses a beefed up Dunia Engine which itself is a modified version of CryEngine from Crytek.

Final Fantasy XV

Grand Theft Auto V

GTA V is the most optimized gaming title that has been made for the PC. It’s so optimized, it even runs on my crap GT 840M based laptop with a smooth FPS on a mix of medium/low settings. I mean what???

Aside from being optimized, GTA V is a great game. It was the Game of The Year for 2013. At 1440p Ultra quality, the game gave us smooth frames on all cards tested.

Ghost Recon: Wildlands

Using the new Anvil Next engine that was developed by Ubisoft Montreal, Ghost Recon: Wildlands goes wild and grand with an open-world setting entirely in Bolivia. This game is a tactical third-person shooter which does seem an awful lot similar to Tom Clancy’s: The Division. The game looks pretty and the wide-scale region of Bolivia looks lovely at all times (Day/Night Cycle).

The Witcher 3 Game of The Year Edition

Witcher 3 is the greatest fantasy RPG of our time. It has a great story, great gameplay mechanics and gorgeous graphics. This is the only game I actually wanted to get a stable FPS at 4K. With GameWorks disabled, I gave all high-end cards the ability to demonstrate their power.

Mass Effect: Andromeda

Being a huge fan of the Mass Effect series, I was highly anticipating the arrival of Andromeda to store shelves. Now that it’s here, I put the fastest gaming card to the test. Using Frostbite, the latest Mass Effect title looks incredibly gorgeous and the open world settings on the different planets immerses you a lot.

Middle Earth: Shadow of War

The successor of 2014’s epic, Shadow of Mordor, Shadow of War continues the previous game’s narrative continuing the story of the ranger Talion and the spirit of the elf lord Celebrimbor, who shares Talion’s body, as they forge a new Ring of Power to amass an army to fight against Sauron. The game uses the latest Firebird Engine developed by Monolith Productions and is very intensive even for modern graphics cards.

Watch Dogs 2

Finally, we have Watch Dogs 2. Gone is Aiden Pearce as the new game takes us away from Chicago and puts us in the shoes of Marcus, a seasoned hacker in San Francisco. Running off the Disrupt engine, the game is based on the DirectX 11 API and is a graphics hungry monster. You can see the results for yourself below:

No graphics card review is complete without evaluating its temperatures and thermal load. The GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Vulcan X OC is fitted with the most advanced version of the SWORIZER cooling design. The triple Saw Sickle fans are featured on the shroud underneath while lies three massive aluminum fins based heatsink blocks with 6 copper heat pipes. The card comes with PWM cooling and an anti-bending plate that keeps the card sturdy and durable in the harshest environments inside your PC.

Note – We tested load with Kombuster which is known as a ‘power virus’ and can permanently damage hardware. Use such software at your own risk!

I compiled the power consumption results by testing each card under idle and full stress when the card was running games. Each graphics card manufacturer sets a default TDP for the card which can vary from vendor to vendor depending on the extra clocks or board features they plug in on their custom cards. The default TDP for the RTX 2080 Ti is 260W (Founders Edition) while the Colorful custom model has a TDP bf more than 350 Watts.

Also, it’s worth noting that the 12nm FFN process from TSMC is a refinement of their 16nm FF node. NVIDIA is cramping even larger amount of transistors and more cores than their previous cards, making it one of the densest chip built to date. It’s likely to consume a lot of power and the results are reflective of that.

The Colorful iGame GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Vulcan X OC comes in at a $200 US premium over the Founders Edition with a price tag of $1399.99 US. This puts the solution in a market tier where some products are really hard to recommend. For instance, there are many custom models of NVIDIA’s GeForce RTX 2080 Ti that fall around the FE price and slightly above that. The $200 US difference, however, is a lot to start with. But if the performance, features, and design are there, it can make the product look more recommendable.

So starting with the performance, we get a factory overclock out of the box. It is highest of all the cards that I have tested here. At 1820 MHz using the Turbo mode and a base clock of 1400 MHz, this card ensures you get the best out of that Turing TU102 GPU. And if you’re the guy who just likes to tweak yourself, the 16+3 Phase (350W+ rated) PCB is a beast. The overclock I achieved was just incredible and shows that you can probably go a little more than that if you have the skills. When it comes to performance versus the other custom solutions, Colorful wins.

Now the features, Colorful is packing a lot since this card is an enthusiast and premium offering. The added accessories sure go well with the package but the card itself has some amazing things which need to be talked about. The RGB Lighting in subtle and hidden beneath the shrouds so it’s not entirely a circus on this card. Then there’s the LCD panel. I mean sure one wouldn’t see an LCD panel as a necessity on a premium graphics card or any graphics card for that matter but it has some useful tricks up its sleeves.

For example, the full-color LCD panel can display a range of GPU details and has a cool starting splash screen. The highlight though is that it can utilize the LCD to display custom text, images, and even GIFs. I mean who would have thought of that? Maybe we will see LCDs becoming the next big thing on graphics cards after RGB (/s).

The design on the card is really great with solid build quality and a huge triple fan cooler. This card makes use of less space than some of the other custom PCB variants that I have tested. Reaching 2200 MHz (max boost clocks) with overclock was a breeze and it definitely holds a space in the top custom models for the RTX 2080 Ti graphics card. The Colorful iGame RTX 2080 Ti Vulcan X OC is a beautiful card with impressive overclocking capabilities and spectacular out of the box clock speeds which are geared at the premium enthusiast gaming market. If you are in the search for one of the fastest RTX 2080 Ti graphics card, the Colorful Vulcan X OC is just that but be ready to spend grand and a half on it.

The post Colorful iGame GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Vulcan X OC 11 GB Graphics Card Review – Vulcan 2.0 With Fully Functional LCD by Hassan Mujtaba appeared first on Wccftech.



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