ASUS introduces ROG STRIX GeForce RTX4090/4080 graphics cards in white

Published: Dec 16th 2022, 08:32 GMT   Comments

ASUS ROG STRIX White GPUs

It’s snowing GPUs again.

ASUS is continuing its tradition of launching white versions of their ROG STRIX series.

ASUS ROG STRIX White GPUs, Source: ASUS

Thus far the company had only announced ROG STRIX GPUs based on NVIDIA RTX 40 series, with no Radeon RX 7000 cards in sight. Until now, ASUS had four models based on RTX 4090 and RTX 4080 SKUs, all in black color scheme. There were four because each card comes in two variants, either with stock clocks or with factory overclocking.

Today ASUS is releasing another four cards, the only real difference being the new color scheme.

ASUS ROG STRIX White GPUs, Source: ASUS

ASUS’ new cards feature white shroud, fans, support frame and backplate, however the PCB is not white. This feature will remain exclusive to the GALAX HOF series. The new cards also get a new packaging design as well, this way you will not make the mistake of buying a different color.

ASUS ROG STRIX White GPUs, Source: ASUS

In terms of specs, each of those cards rely on one 16-pin power connector and feature full custom PCB design. The company is providing two specs for each model: Gaming (or Default) and the so-called OC mode which can be applied through the GPU Tweak Utility. This software overclock is safe and recommended by the company, which means no warranty will be voided when overclocking the card this way.

ASUS RTX4090 ROG STRIX White

  • CUDA Cores: 16384
  • Memory: 24GB GDDR6X 21 Gbps
  • OC Model
    • OC mode: 2640 MHz
    • Default mode: 2610 MHz
  • Non-OC Model
    • OC mode: 2550 MHz
    • Gaming mode: 2520 MHz

ASUS RTX4080 ROG STRIX White

  • CUDA Cores: 9728
  • Memory: 16GB GDDR6X 22.4 Gbps
  • OC Model
    • OC mode: 2655 MHz
    • Default mode: 2625 MHz (Boost Clock)
  • Non-OC Model
    • OC mode: 2535 MHz
    • Default mode: 2505 MHz (Boost Clock)

ASUS ROG STRIX White GPUs, Source: ASUS

ASUS ROG Strix design is one of the biggest cards this generation. They measure 35.7 cm in length and require a 3.5-slot on the motherboard. Unfortunately, ASUS ROG Strix cards are also one of the most expensive ones. This being an even less popular choice will likely mean an even higher price.

Source: ASUS




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