I encountered the opposite kind of ease when tackling overclocking on the GTX 1080, however. When I produced this kind of article for the GTX 970 & 980, GTX 980 Ti, and GTX TITAN X, I didn’t have to fuss that much to achieve an overclock that was as stable as it was impressive. With that, this article has been a long time coming, so let’s just get on with it: Our GTX 1080 Overclock In case you’re not familiar with this article format, it’s where we take the latest GPU and try our hand at figuring out the best settings to be used in a handful of games at appropriate resolutions, and then seek out the best possible stable overclock for the card (we’re talking undeniably 100% stable). Thus, this article (and the others) are late but better late than never, right? When I said that, I didn’t realize that the ever-elusive poltergeist in our lab would decide to come out and play. I took an in-depth look at NVIDIA’s GeForce GTX 1080 a couple of weeks ago, and mentioned that there was more content en route.
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