MSI SUPRIM RTX 5080 SOC Graphics Card Review
Overclocking
So, a gorgeous looking card with some impressive specs, even if the SOC or Super Overclocked naming leaves something to be desired, as for me, less than 5% isn’t what I’d class as Super Overclocked, and that’s a naming convention that was once done by Gigabyte, so not quite sure what’s going on there.
That aside, obviously it makes sense to see what we’re able to do ourselves in terms of overclocks, because you’d like to think there’s quite a decent amount of headroom in this card, especially given its higher price point. It’s here where we managed to push our memory overclock by the maximum 375MHz, which is capped by NVIDIA. In terms of the core clock, we were able to increase that by 430MHz, giving us an overall boost clock of 3175MHz, so a pretty sizeable overclock from stock. And considering this card already comes pre-factory overclocked, it’s nice to see some extra headroom above that, though to see what that does for real-world performance, we booted up F1 24 for an hour-long loop to see how temperatures, fan speed, power usage and clock speed behaviour changed, if at all.
GPU-Z Stock
GPU-Z Silent Mode
Suprim SOC Gaming Mode
Software Settings