Following up after last week’s teasers, GIGABYTE has officially announced two ultra-high-end graphics cards under its AORUS brand: the AORUS GeForce GTX 1080 Ti Waterforce Xtreme Edition 11G and the AORUS GeForce GTX 1080 Ti Waterforce WB Xtreme Edition 11G.

Both verbosely-named cards, as the Waterforce branding implies, are liquid-cooling oriented. The standard Waterforce Xtreme Edition is coupled with an all-in-one (AIO) closed loop cooler, while the Waterforce WB Xtreme Edition is outfitted with a full-size water block that can connect to a custom open loop. And so, without pesky fans taking up space, AORUS has dedicated the extra real estate on the card shrouds to a bountiful number of LEDs.

AORUS GeForce GTX 1080 Ti Waterforce Xtreme Editions 11G
  Waterforce Xtreme Edition Waterforce WB Xtreme Edition
Boost Clock 1746MHz (OC Mode)
1721MHz (Gaming Mode)
Base Clock 1632MHz (OC Mode)
1607MHz (Gaming Mode)
Memory Clock 11448MHz (OC Mode)
11232MHz (Gaming Mode)
VRAM 11GB GDDR5X
(352-bit)
TDP Unspecified
Outputs 3x DP1.4, 2x HDMI2.0b (Rear), 1x HDMI2.0b (Front) 1x DL-DVI-D
VR Link VR Mode: 3x DP1.4, 3x HDMI2.0b
VR Link Standard Mode: 3x DP1.4, 1x HDMI2.0b (Rear), 1x DL-DVI-D
Power Connectors 2 x 8pin
Length 267mm
Width 2 Slot (36mm) 2 Slot (28mm)
Height 123mm 149mm
Cooler Type AIO CLC (120mm) Water Block (full-cover)
Price TBA

Generally speaking, both cards only differ in their cooling designs, having the same clocks, 12+2 power phases, and basic features. The 120mm AIO Waterforce Xtreme Edition has a water block that only covers the GPU, with a water block-cooled copper heatpipe and base plate covering the MOSFETs and VRAM. Behind the GPU, the card has a small copper piece embedded in the back plate. In comparison, the Waterforce WB Xtreme Edition has its water block and flow design covering all key components, and has a larger copper slab in the back plate.

Both cards offer the AORUS VR Link design for their display outputs. What this means is that an extra HDMI port is offered on the front (internal) side of the card, while the PCIe bracket has 2 HDMI ports, a DVI-D port, and 3 DisplayPorts. Due to the limited number of display controllers on the GP102 GPU, only 4 ports/displays can be used at one time. In standard mode, a maximum of 4 outputs can be used, selecting from among the first HDMI port, 3 DisplayPorts, and the DVI-D port on the PCIe bracket. In VR Mode, the DVI-D port is not used, and a maximum of 4 outputs can be used from among the 3 DisplayPorts and 3 HDMI ports. Ultimately, the idea is here that the front-facing HDMI can be used for a VR headset, while the rear HDMIs can still be utilized simultaneously for monitors without swapping cables.

As Xtreme Edition cards, the Waterforce and Waterforce WB qualify for an extra year of AORUS Care upon registration within 30 days of purchase, which then adds to AORUS’ standard three-year warranty for four total years. All-in-all, that could mean over 1400 days of guaranteed brightly-lit gaming sessions with RGB Fusion, AORUS’ LED software. For the WB variant, this includes lighting up the water block fittings and the AORUS eagle emblems on both sides of the card, giving the impression that AORUS has simply opted to create a giant rectangular LED that also happens to run games.

GIGABYTE has not announced pricing information at this time. A teaser posted by the official AORUS Twitter states 7/7/17, presumably the availability date for both cards.

Source: AORUS/GIGABYTE

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  • m16 - Sunday, July 2, 2017 - link

    That's a terrible name but otherwise a great solution.

    I am a bit impressed by the amount of connectors and versatility. If it has great temperatures even in smaller cases this card is the winner so far for its class.
  • Diji1 - Sunday, July 2, 2017 - link

    It seems like most dual fan air cooled GTX 10** cards overclock to 1900-2000Mhz.

    And then most cooling options higher than this such as watercooling gets to around 2100Mhz unless I'm mistaken.

    The added expense doesn't seem worth the small performance increase.
  • pyroxide - Sunday, July 2, 2017 - link

    the 1080 Ti and Titan Xp have whole different architecture than the 1070 and 1080. you might look into GP100 vs GP102 before saying GTX 10** cards are all the same.
  • Diji1 - Sunday, July 2, 2017 - link

    And what clock speed do the air cooled and liquid cooled achieve compared to each other? Thought so.
  • extide - Wednesday, July 12, 2017 - link

    GP102 vs GP104, actually. GP100 is not sold as a consumer GPU.
  • grovedesire - Thursday, July 27, 2017 - link

    Should i play only on the night because of price of energy. Before buy gtx 1080 reviews https://bestgtx.com/best-geforce-gtx-1080/

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