- This unboxing is
brought to you by AORUS. This is the AORIS XTREME GeForce RTX 3080. And it promises to, (lid falls) not fall out of the box, if I do that. Sorry, that came off a little bit, there. This is one of the most
overbuilt 3080's out there. And it features what they're calling Max-Coverage Cooling. (plastic rustles) I promise, it's gonna be worth the effort. (laughs) I get such a kick out
of how freakin' heavy these 3,000 series cards are. (plastic rustles) Now, other board makers, they've
gone out and they've done triple slot coolers. But AORIS, they said, "No! Four slots is the right
amount for the RTX 3080." You hear that sound in the background? That's the engine revving. Actually, there's construction going on in our office, right now. And we can't delay them,
or it's not gonna be done before the end of the year. Let's peel this puppy. (plastic peels) She's a thick boy, all right. - [Jono] Looks like a 3090. - [Linus] Jebus. Well, you know they have
the same GPU, right? - [Jono] Yep. - So, overclocking the snot out of a 3080 means you pretty much need a
3090 class cooling solution. There's some other accessories in here. Let's have a, let's take
a minute here, though. All right, what all we got in here? All right, fancy case badge. Whoops. And whatever this guys is. Ca-caw! - [Jono] Is that Batman? - I think it's somewhere
in between Batman, Birdperson and some kind
of, what's that Pokemon, with the bone? - [Jono] Oh, Cubone. - Ca-caw. Oh, I fell down. This is actually not bad. (mouth sounds) Okay, enough of that. Let's have a look at the card. This is cool. This isn't even in my talking points. Check this out, Brandon. Now, you can't use all
of them simultaneously, because that's a limitation
of the Ampere architecture of the GPU. But look at this, three Display Ports and three HDMIs. What that lets you do, is have
the upmost in flexibility. You wanna run, you know,
three LG C10 48 inch TVs at 120 Hertz? Boom, you're covered! Three HDMI 2.1's. Or if you wanna run three PC displays at high refresh rates, let's say, you know,
1080p 360 Hertz monitors. Boom, you can do that as well, without having to use any adapters. Of course, it uses PCI Express Gen 4. And no NVLink SLI fingers. You have to step up to
the RTX 3090 for that. What they do have up here though, is a little toggle switch. So, you can either throw
the BIOS in OC mode or silent mode, depending
on what kind of a profile you wanna run in. Now, I would imagine that in silent mode, this thing would be
pretty freaking silent. They've got three fans, with one of them counter rotating here, in the middle. And what looks like a very
silence optimized heat sync. So, it's large, but more
importantly than that, you can actually see that the fin spacing is quite a bit less
dense than you might see on some of the cards that
aren't quite so thick. A less thick fin stack
does mean that there's less overall surface area of
metal per cubic inch. But what it also means is that it's easier for the air to pass through the heat sync, with less turbulence. That's another interesting thing, here. So, it doesn't quite have the same amount of pass through as Nvidia's design on their Founders Edition, but you can see they
are actually leveraging this edge fan, which is
fed by five heat pipes, to do a lot little bit of pass
through cooling over here, on the side. This card continues the
trend of Nvidia's partners not thinking too much of their
proprietary 12-pin connector. Although, I guess it's
hard to think much of it, when they were probably as surprised by it as anyone else was. So, it uses three 8-pin connectors. And it doesn't look like much right now, 'cause it's just like a black mirror, but this, right here, is a
display that can be loaded up with images and GIFs. So, we're gonna throw it onto a bench and try it out real quick, here. I have very high
expectations for this cooler. Especially given that
it's got a vapor chamber that I didn't even notice before. So, heatpipes feed this
entire fin stack, over here. And then, this one over here,
actually has a combination. It's got two heatpipes,
plus a vapor chamber, handling the GPU and the memory. Which are the hottest
components on this board. So, we've got 10 gigs of GDDR6 RAM. Do I have a keyboard
and mouse by any chance? - [Jono] Yeah, it's right behind you. - What a boss. - [Jono] You said to
get everything prepared. - I say lots of things. - [Jono] You said you wanted a horse, so I gave you a horse. - That's true, you did give me a horse. We went clip clop, that day. Everything's goin' well, so far. Plenty of time for it to
not output anything, though. Let me get you guys a better
look at the display, there. Not bad. That's pretty sick. This keyboard is really cute, but we might have to switch off of it. Thanks, like, who doesn't need
arrows in their daily life? How sick is this desk pad, by the way? Can we just take a moment, to appreciate lttstore.com's
fantastic desk pad? Look how gigantic this thing is. Now, let's see how we
hold up for coil whine when we're actually stressing the GPU. Huh, actually, not bad. Here, hold on a second. Let me get my mic, here. Is this boom in the shot? (fans blow) Not bad, eh? Dang, it also looks like we're
gonna settle in around like, 65 degrees, with this puppy. Not too shabby. All right, AORUS, that
plus a four year warranty makes this look like a
pretty compelling card. Of course, if you've
got the budget for it, versus a more basic one. So, as always, you can check it out at the link in the video description. And as always, you should make sure you are subscribed to ShortCircuit.
My 3080 Xtreme has the loudest, most annoying coil whine I've ever heard. yay.
strix looks way better, this thing look so cheaply made :/
My PNY RTX 3080 is a freakin baby compared to this chunker