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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  • Death666Angel - Saturday, October 11, 2014 - link

    "This seems eerily similar to my own article" | "I wasn't saying anything negative about you writing this"
    The first quote does seem like you insinuate that this article is plagiarising your work. That's just my reading of it, though.
  • LedHed - Thursday, October 16, 2014 - link

    Lol, do you really think I believe AnAndTech read my article a year ago and then sat on the idea until now? Give me a break, I was joking...
  • ChristTheGreat - Friday, October 10, 2014 - link

    Tested Afterburner on my R9 290 WF OC, doesn' work well.. I can't get 2D and 3D clock. if I put 2D with riva tuner stats (automatic changing 2D to 3D), it always crash, black screen.

    Tried GPU tweak, Set my 3D clock, and it works fine changing from 2D to 3D. Only thing is ram going from 150 to 1500 when I am on the internet, instead, no issue at all.

    But missing CCC Core clock without % (and bios flashing for voltage :( )
  • Rock1m1 - Sunday, October 12, 2014 - link

    I love the MSI Afterburner, rock solid, feature complete. For my Sapphire Trix R9 290 OC, I clocked it to 1130Mhz core, and 1500Mhz memory. Great performance, meeting 780Ti stock in a lot of benchmarks.
  • frwiz - Monday, October 20, 2014 - link

    boost settings are not saved after I click on apply tab. When I re-open precision-x app, boost clocks are back to default settings. I tried the oc scanner and it shows the default speed with no over clocks.is there a bug somewhere
  • SeanJ76 - Thursday, October 30, 2014 - link

    EVGA precisonX 5.2.3 or w/e newest version is out is FLAT OUT TERRIBLE!!! Sli tunning does not work, K-boost does not work, over-volting does not work, core and memory offsets do not stick. The only good tuner is the Evga PrecisonX Legacy 4.2.1. I will not use AB because their overvoltage does not actually change the voltage on the actual cards, its fake, made to look like it works, but Unwinder himself as confirmed over-volting in AB does not work at all.
  • IHxInfi - Monday, November 3, 2014 - link

    I wish they wouldn't "pimp my ride" all of these over clocking utilities... a functional professional looking application would be much preferable.
  • reddwar4ever - Saturday, December 12, 2015 - link

    Really interesting review. One thing Imneed is a ' dummies' guide to overclocking using this utility, it can't be as simple as increasing the GPU clock until a temperature limit is reched and checking for stability with OC scanner, what about the memclock setting ! and there are lots of warnings about not increasing the voltage as this could shorten the life of the GPU....but as far as I understand, increasing this slightly allows a higher GPU clock speed....this is why a guide to overclocking with this utility step by step would be so handy red.dwarf4ever@yahoo.com thanks
  • ChewyXX - Tuesday, November 15, 2016 - link

    [Ed: does anyone really think in Fahrenheit when it comes to computer temperatures?]
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    I did not get offended about your comment, but yes I prefer Fahrenheit. This is not to say I do not use the metric of some measurements though.

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