ASUS ROG STRIX GeForce RTX 2080TI-O11G Overclocked 11G GDDR6 HDMI DP 1.4 USB Type-C Gaming Graphics Card (ROG-STRIX-RTX-2080TI-O11G)








Key features
- •Powered by NVIDIA Turing with 1665 MHz Boost Clock (OC Mode), 4352 CUDA cores and overclocked 11GB GDDR6 memory in a 2. 7 slot form Factor
- •Supports up-to 4 monitors with DisplayPort 1. 4, HDMI 2. 0 and a VR headset via USB Type C ports
- •Auto Extreme and Max-Contact Technology deliver premium quality and reliability with aerospace-grade Super Alloy Power II components while maximizing heatsink contact
- •ASUS Aura Sync RGB lighting features a nearly endless spectrum of colors with the ability to synchronize effects across an ever-expanding ecosystem of AURA Sync enabled products
- •GPU Tweak II makes monitoring performance and streaming in real time easier than ever, and includes additional software like Game Booster, X Split Game caster, WT Fast and Quantum Cloud
- •Triple Axial-Tech 0db Fans increase airflow through the heatsink and boasts IP5X dust-resistance
ASUS ROG STRIX GeForce RTX 2080TI-O11G Overclocked 11G GDDR6 HDMI DP 1.4 USB Type-C Gaming Graphics Card (ROG-STRIX-RTX-2080TI-O11G)
List Price: $526.71$474.04DEALYou Save: $52.67 (10%)
Free shippingFree Returns – 30 daysFree Order CancellationSecure Payment2–3 Days DeliveryGet It June 24, 2026In Stock (1)No marketing spamNo account requiredFulfilment by FedEx / Amazon / UPS / ShipwirePayPal / Card Buyer Protection
Customer Reviews
Reviews sourced from verified Amazon purchasers4.6
out of 5
Based on 10 reviews
5★
60%
4★
40%
3★
0%
2★
0%
1★
0%
First impressions, will update after 3 months
Ozi M.✓ Verified Purchase•August 7, 2023
Important details to give you my experience so far:
4 fans, 2 intake, 2 out
Memory: 32 gigs of memory @ 3600 Mhz
CPU: AMD 7 3700x
PSU 750
Temp: Idle 32c, normal PC use 36c, Loaded i.e(S.o.T.T.R. 4K/87FPS/RTOff.
>> Review:
+ Beautiful RGB lights on the card( i have them according to Temp, love that) they have diff modes.
+ Big Beefy card, and very heavy, just a unit of a card ( i expected this card to be gigantic, and it is)
+ Low (on regular use) to mid High noise (on load gaming) but quiet enough to not be distracting.
+ On a game like Shadow of the Tomb raider, runs fairly quiet, 4K 60-80 FPS (no RT) on high to Ultra settings, i maxed out on the more important settings for graphical details and you won't be disappointed.
+ Setup was super easy (came from RX GPU family of GPU's), transition was easy, no issues on software install.
- TBH, i have no complaints. My only suggestion is that at 63c (game loaded settings) the are is pretty warm/hot, and i plan on putting another fan to make total of 5 120mm, or if you have the extra cash, put in something more sophisticated to cool it. So far i don't believe it's an issue, I looked online, and on max loads, you're going to get from 60c to 75c, anything over that, i would start looking to invest on cooling it off. I'm just going to buy an extra 120mm fan to make sure it gets an extra push of cooling for peace of mind, but so far, so good. I highly recommend the card so far, i will update in a couple months.
4 fans, 2 intake, 2 out
Memory: 32 gigs of memory @ 3600 Mhz
CPU: AMD 7 3700x
PSU 750
Temp: Idle 32c, normal PC use 36c, Loaded i.e(S.o.T.T.R. 4K/87FPS/RTOff.
>> Review:
+ Beautiful RGB lights on the card( i have them according to Temp, love that) they have diff modes.
+ Big Beefy card, and very heavy, just a unit of a card ( i expected this card to be gigantic, and it is)
+ Low (on regular use) to mid High noise (on load gaming) but quiet enough to not be distracting.
+ On a game like Shadow of the Tomb raider, runs fairly quiet, 4K 60-80 FPS (no RT) on high to Ultra settings, i maxed out on the more important settings for graphical details and you won't be disappointed.
+ Setup was super easy (came from RX GPU family of GPU's), transition was easy, no issues on software install.
- TBH, i have no complaints. My only suggestion is that at 63c (game loaded settings) the are is pretty warm/hot, and i plan on putting another fan to make total of 5 120mm, or if you have the extra cash, put in something more sophisticated to cool it. So far i don't believe it's an issue, I looked online, and on max loads, you're going to get from 60c to 75c, anything over that, i would start looking to invest on cooling it off. I'm just going to buy an extra 120mm fan to make sure it gets an extra push of cooling for peace of mind, but so far, so good. I highly recommend the card so far, i will update in a couple months.
The BEAST
Potato Hat✓ Verified Purchase•July 30, 2023
I recently purchased the ASUS ROG STRIX GeForce RTX 2080TI and couldn't be happier.
I have a large case but even so, it's a large card so install was a bit tight. I was able to get it in by moving a few cables around and overall, I'm very pleased with it. I also plugged in two separate power cables to it as opposed to one power cable which splits into two ends. Some had reported the card shutting off due to the single power cable issue. I have yet to experience this and I've been pushing the card pretty hard so I feel the double power cable trick works.
I run iRacing with triple monitors and the results compared to my previous 980TI are night and day. I'm still running an i7-7700k which I think is the bottleneck but I'm still able to push the card pretty hard and get good frame rates. I still have to turn down certain settings like shadows and whatnot to be able to get smooth and consistent fps across three monitors but overall, I don't need to see the shadows of a pole I'm driving past at 150mph.
After downloading the software, setup was a breeze and I was up and running in no time at all. The card is quiet on my machine but admittedly, I wear a headset so it would have to be very loud for me to notice. But even when I don't have them on, I don't notice any noises outside of the low fan sounds.
I'm a bit disappointed that the card didn't come with any stickers but that's not enough of a reason for me to give it less than five stars as this review is about the card itself.
Even though it's a bit pricey, I feel I've upgraded my PC to a point that it will be some time before I have to do so again. If you're looking for something that will last you a bit, is quiet while gaming, and work well with triple monitors, I think you'll enjoy this card.
I have a large case but even so, it's a large card so install was a bit tight. I was able to get it in by moving a few cables around and overall, I'm very pleased with it. I also plugged in two separate power cables to it as opposed to one power cable which splits into two ends. Some had reported the card shutting off due to the single power cable issue. I have yet to experience this and I've been pushing the card pretty hard so I feel the double power cable trick works.
I run iRacing with triple monitors and the results compared to my previous 980TI are night and day. I'm still running an i7-7700k which I think is the bottleneck but I'm still able to push the card pretty hard and get good frame rates. I still have to turn down certain settings like shadows and whatnot to be able to get smooth and consistent fps across three monitors but overall, I don't need to see the shadows of a pole I'm driving past at 150mph.
After downloading the software, setup was a breeze and I was up and running in no time at all. The card is quiet on my machine but admittedly, I wear a headset so it would have to be very loud for me to notice. But even when I don't have them on, I don't notice any noises outside of the low fan sounds.
I'm a bit disappointed that the card didn't come with any stickers but that's not enough of a reason for me to give it less than five stars as this review is about the card itself.
Even though it's a bit pricey, I feel I've upgraded my PC to a point that it will be some time before I have to do so again. If you're looking for something that will last you a bit, is quiet while gaming, and work well with triple monitors, I think you'll enjoy this card.
First card had a bad fan, replacement card has been great in all games.
Andrew Jones✓ Verified Purchase•July 8, 2023
First I would like to say I wanted to go with a three blower card, but you can't find them anymore except at an insane overprice point, unless you are lucky enough to hit that sweet spot.
Anyway, the card arrived, I swap it into my system, and upon power up the fan had a nasty knocking sound; I'm pretty sure it was hitting something on each revolution. I went through ASUS RMA and after they received the defective card they sent a new one out (RMA shipped 13Dec, received new card 27Dec), wish it wouldn't have been a 2 week turn around. I also wish that ASUS paid for the shipping to them, although they do offer a discount to buy a shipping label for the shipment to them.
Once I got the new card I swapped it in and it has worked great since. It does top out at 84ish C under heavy load, while a medium load shows around 54C. I've tried it with maxed Battlefield 4 and FFXV settings, and it works great, I backed off the FFXV render percentage a bit to 175, and it seems to do well at that. If I had a 4K monitor I could push it a bit further, but that's probably the next upgrade to my system, as dual 4k monitors would be expensive currently.
If you are planning on running multiple cards then this is the perfect card for you, however if you are looking to maximize performance with a single card either wait for the 3 fan version to become available or buy this and use a water block.
Anyway, the card arrived, I swap it into my system, and upon power up the fan had a nasty knocking sound; I'm pretty sure it was hitting something on each revolution. I went through ASUS RMA and after they received the defective card they sent a new one out (RMA shipped 13Dec, received new card 27Dec), wish it wouldn't have been a 2 week turn around. I also wish that ASUS paid for the shipping to them, although they do offer a discount to buy a shipping label for the shipment to them.
Once I got the new card I swapped it in and it has worked great since. It does top out at 84ish C under heavy load, while a medium load shows around 54C. I've tried it with maxed Battlefield 4 and FFXV settings, and it works great, I backed off the FFXV render percentage a bit to 175, and it seems to do well at that. If I had a 4K monitor I could push it a bit further, but that's probably the next upgrade to my system, as dual 4k monitors would be expensive currently.
If you are planning on running multiple cards then this is the perfect card for you, however if you are looking to maximize performance with a single card either wait for the 3 fan version to become available or buy this and use a water block.
Hardly worth it but undeniable performance
Andre✓ Verified Purchase•June 15, 2023
I have a 2560x1440p 144Hz G-SYNC monitor. Let's talk about performance in Battlefield V. Please note that my tests were conducted after yesterday's game-ready driver (which further optimized BFV performance), with a decent overclock, and with all graphics maxed out.
With DX12 and DXR (raytracing) enabled, I personally feel that the cons outweigh the pros. It's generally smooth 90% of the time averaging roughly 80FPS. The other 10% is maddening though. When either lots of explosions are going off, spawning in/out, or other seemingly random times, my frames drop HARD - sometimes down to 30 and other times down to 9. I'm pretty picky when it comes to frame rates and stuttering, and at least to my eyes, it looks terrible. The stutters are drastic and can definitely get me killed, but the game is definitely still playable (even for PC gamers' standards). So, at the cost of drastic stuttering from time to time, I get to look at my reflection in a window at the beginning of any match on Rotterdam, and then move on. Other than that once-every-hour (at best) occurrence, I don't notice any difference in the quality in the graphics.
With DX12 enabled and DXR disabled, I average 100+ FPS and occasionally dip to no less than 70 FPS in the worst possible case. For the seemingly the same exact graphical fidelity, that's a better deal for me, so I leave raytracing disabled at least for now, but I don't see further optimization changing that.
With DX12 and DXR (raytracing) enabled, I personally feel that the cons outweigh the pros. It's generally smooth 90% of the time averaging roughly 80FPS. The other 10% is maddening though. When either lots of explosions are going off, spawning in/out, or other seemingly random times, my frames drop HARD - sometimes down to 30 and other times down to 9. I'm pretty picky when it comes to frame rates and stuttering, and at least to my eyes, it looks terrible. The stutters are drastic and can definitely get me killed, but the game is definitely still playable (even for PC gamers' standards). So, at the cost of drastic stuttering from time to time, I get to look at my reflection in a window at the beginning of any match on Rotterdam, and then move on. Other than that once-every-hour (at best) occurrence, I don't notice any difference in the quality in the graphics.
With DX12 enabled and DXR disabled, I average 100+ FPS and occasionally dip to no less than 70 FPS in the worst possible case. For the seemingly the same exact graphical fidelity, that's a better deal for me, so I leave raytracing disabled at least for now, but I don't see further optimization changing that.
Awesome! But broken...
SerenityFade✓ Verified Purchase•June 12, 2023
First off this thing is beefy and it looks awesome! The Asus Rog Strix 2080 ti is feature rich and packs a heavy punch. Instant 4K bliss! The software to control the RGB, fan profiles, and clock settings has a somewhat dated interface but is easy to use.
The card is not at all loud even under load. I have 16 fans in my PC configured for max airflow from the front and bottom and out the top and back and everything is quiet-is with the exception of one exhaust fan up top. The GPU is one of the quiet parts of the build.
Temps are not great. I understand that the 20 series Nvidia GPUs run a little hot, but this is rediculous. Of course I'm a little spoiled to having a water block on my GPU so to be honest that does play a part. The card gets hot fast and takes a long while to cool after a gaming session.
The thing that sent me over the edge and caused me to return the card was its lack of stability. Without an OC it would easily hit 1995 on the core which is awesome, but as it got hotter it got more and more unstable which resulted in FPS dropping to a crawl after some 10 minutes in A Plague Tale: Innocence. The only thing I got out of that session was a very warm room.
Also something that was sort of a pain was shopping for a water block for the card. Because of it's non-standard pcb layout it can't use most of the 2080 ti blocks on the market. The block had to be labeled for use with a 2080 ti Rog Strix. There are few on the market.
I really liked this card and it would have been perfect had it not been for the stability thing and the water block compatibility.
The card is not at all loud even under load. I have 16 fans in my PC configured for max airflow from the front and bottom and out the top and back and everything is quiet-is with the exception of one exhaust fan up top. The GPU is one of the quiet parts of the build.
Temps are not great. I understand that the 20 series Nvidia GPUs run a little hot, but this is rediculous. Of course I'm a little spoiled to having a water block on my GPU so to be honest that does play a part. The card gets hot fast and takes a long while to cool after a gaming session.
The thing that sent me over the edge and caused me to return the card was its lack of stability. Without an OC it would easily hit 1995 on the core which is awesome, but as it got hotter it got more and more unstable which resulted in FPS dropping to a crawl after some 10 minutes in A Plague Tale: Innocence. The only thing I got out of that session was a very warm room.
Also something that was sort of a pain was shopping for a water block for the card. Because of it's non-standard pcb layout it can't use most of the 2080 ti blocks on the market. The block had to be labeled for use with a 2080 ti Rog Strix. There are few on the market.
I really liked this card and it would have been perfect had it not been for the stability thing and the water block compatibility.
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