Final Words

Throughout our review we've been looking at the strengths and weakness of these utilities. We've seen some that are geared towards beginners and others made for experts. The basics of these utilities remain the same, as they are designed to increase the frequencies of your video card. The biggest differences lie within the features and options of each utility and how much value they add for the user. Let's do a quick recap and compare the utilities we've looked at in our round-up.

To start things off, AMD's OverDrive appears to be a rather barebones utility. As with all of the utilities in our round-up, we get the core overclocking section with some entry level monitoring. OverDrive does have a practical interface that is less intimidating for beginners that are just learning to overclock. Admittedly, I didn't like the percentage based overclocking on GCN 1.1 and newer GPUs, and the lack of overall features keeps it from being an option for advanced users.

OverDrive users looking for more should direct their attention to Sapphire's TriXX utility and the ASUS GPU Tweak utility. Both utilities have a GPU voltage adjustment feature and also include beautiful and intuitive interfaces. When comparing these two utilities, I would consider TriXX to be a very functional utility but it's a bit basic in comparison to GPU Tweak, as it doesn't have the amount of features. However, there is one feature that TriXX has over GPU Tweak and that is GPU voltage adjustment for a larger range of AMD cards. This feature alone could put it in front of GPU Tweak as being a choice for advanced AMD overclockers.

As previously noted, GPU Tweak also works for both AMD and NVIDIA based graphics cards, which can make GPU Tweak enticing for users that often change video card manufactures. This also makes GPU Tweak a good entry level utility for overclockers with NVIDIA based video cards. While it's not as entry level as AMD's OverDrive, it's certainly not as complex as MSI Afterburner’s RivaTuner based utility.

Which brings us to MSI’s Afterburner and EVGA’s Precision X. These are the most popular utilities within the overclocking community. Unsurprisingly, Precision X and Afterburner are the most feature rich utilities in our round-up as well, and because of this they're also the most complex. First time overclockers may feel a bit in over their heads when using either of these utilities at first.

Both utilities offer features such as voltage adjustment, on screen display, in-depth monitoring, custom fan profiles, OC profiles, and more. While they both offer largely the same features, Afterburner tends to do them a bit better while offering more of them. For instance, Afterburner has a more extensive on screen display feature, a more in-depth monitoring section, video capture capabilities, and compatibility with both AMD and NVIDIA video cards. However, Precision X does offer some standout features, such as a subjectively better-looking interface, the fantastic OC Scanner X stress tester, and the Pixel Clock OC feature.

Ultimately when all is said and done, in the face of some very strong competition we feel that MSI Afterburner rises above the other overclocking utilities in our round-up. Afterburner’s long list of features certainly helps its case here, but it’s also an evolving utility that is constantly being updated and improved, more than any utility in our round-up. In addition, Afterburner’s developers have done their best to ensure that voltage control is available on a wide variety of video cards as well, making MSI’s voltage control support second to none. With such a wide feature set and backed by this type of commitment and support, for these reasons MSI Afterburner is the current gold standard among video card overclocking utilities.

MSI Afterburner
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  • Iketh - Wednesday, October 8, 2014 - link

    The article title is clear.
  • Crotan - Wednesday, October 8, 2014 - link

    Aren't they are just re-skins of RivaTuner. Pretty sure most of them has the fine print "powered by RivaTuner somewhere. They're all watered down versions of the once great utility that are left up to the respective company to release patches for.
  • Michael Wilding - Wednesday, October 8, 2014 - link

    MSI Afterburner is the only utility to use the RivaTuner core now.
  • TiGr1982 - Wednesday, October 8, 2014 - link

    Sapphire TriXX is indeed simple and easy to use with Radeons (used it with my HD 7950 Boost).
    Works fine with no issues.
  • Impulses - Wednesday, October 8, 2014 - link

    MSI should steal some of their Afterburner devs to improve their mobo software... :p
  • Iketh - Wednesday, October 8, 2014 - link

    What about undervolting? Not one mention of it.

    People ask all the time why undervolt video cards? Are you kidding me? Especially with a card like an EVGA 780 Ti Classified like I have.....

    My card 1150MHz 1.175v stock....

    Using power tune at 85% and upping core MHz, it's stable 1100MHz 1.050v ... yea that's right, over .1v reduction on a huge chip = massive power and noise savings while losing just 5% performance. Quit asking this dumb question people, and utility designers please don't leave out negative volt adjustments anymore. Even Afterburner won't undervolt my card, only OVERVOLT LOL... I overvolt this thing .075 and gain a whopping 40MHz and fans scream like they're gonna fly off their bearings and gut my pc.......
  • Hrel - Wednesday, October 8, 2014 - link

    I totally agree! I care much more about heat/noise/power consumption/longevity than I do a miniscule, largely academic, performance improvement. I'll take a 8db drop in noise over changing my FPS from 188fps to 198fps any day.
  • Death666Angel - Saturday, October 11, 2014 - link

    Here, my 1250/6600MHz Chip/Memory OC on my AMD HD7970 is doing wonders on my 1440p 105Hz monitor. Increases the framerate in most games I play by at least a 2 digit number. It's also water cooled, as a decent graphics card should be. So no noise increase.

    Why would you buy a high powered card and downvolt it while also downclocking it? Your numbers are also hard to read. You overvolt .075 from 1.175 or from your 1.05? Either way, if you need to overvolt .075 for 40Mhz, you have a dud of a card and if your fans scream, you bought shit. Or stock. Which is shit if you don't get an aftermarket cooler / WC.
  • Michael Wilding - Wednesday, October 8, 2014 - link

    Good call. While it's nowhere near as popular as overvolting, it's a good way to bring down temps and power consumption.
  • Iketh - Wednesday, October 8, 2014 - link

    I'd also like to add Asus GPU Tweak is averaging two updates a month which is far more often than Afterburner's update frequency which you gave praise for....

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