Moore Threads MTT S80 GPU Benchmarked by PC Watch Japan (2024)

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Thursday, June 15th 2023

by

T0@st
Discuss (11 Comments)

The Moore Threads MTT S80 gaming-oriented graphics card has been tested mostly by Chinese hardware publications, but Japan's PC Watch has managed to get hold of a sample unit configured with 16 GB GDDR6 (14 Gbps) for evaluation purposes and soon published their findings in a "HotHot REVIEW!" The MTT S80 GPU appears to be based on PowerVR architecture (developed by Imagination Technologies), but official Moore Threads literature boasts that their own Chunxaio design is behind all proceedings with 4096 "MUSA" cores. The GPU's clock speed is set at 1.8 GHz, and maximum compute performance has been measured at 14.2 TFLOPS. A 256-bit memory bus grants a bandwidth transfer rate of 448 GB/s. PC Watch notes that the card's support for PCIe Gen 5 x 16 (offering up to 128 GB/s bandwidth) is quite surprising, given the early nature of this connection standard.

Moore Threads has claimed in the past that their cards support Direct X, but PC Watch has discovered that the S80 does not work with DX12, and their tests also demonstrated significant compatibility issues under DX11—with plenty of system freezes and error messages logged. The reviewer(s) had to downshift in some cases to DX9 game environments, in order to gather reliable/stable data. TPU's GPU-Z utility is shown to have no registration information for the S80, and it cannot read the GPU's clock. PC Watch compared their sample unit to an NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti graphics card—the entry level 2016-era GPU managed to best the newer competition in terms of in-game performance and power efficiency.

The triple-fan cooled MTT S80 has a 255 W TGP rating, and PC Watch measured an average power consumption of 142 W which seems ludicrous when placed next to the 1050 Ti only consuming 60 W (on average). The much older (75 W TGP) card has 4 GB DDR5 VRAM with a 112 GB/s bandwidth—its meagre compute performance (2.1 TFLOPS) should be far outpaced by the MTT S80 GPU, but the latter's full potential is almost certainly dragged down by unoptimized drivers. Tom's Hardware has translated some of PC Watch's charts:

A video segment was included with PC Watch Japan's published review of the Moore Threads MTT S80 graphics card:

Sources:PC Watch Japan, Tom's Hardware, Wccftech

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Add your own comment
#1
natr0n

Last I remember power vr is Dreamcast.

#2
Denver

Basically slower than an iGPU(vega and above).

#3
TheoneandonlyMrK

255 watt 1050ti?

Go you team !?.

#4
ToTTenTranz

If it's using a PowerVR / IMG architecture, then it shouldn't perform so badly. This is probably due to driver development being close to non-existent at this point, and there's probably very few people over at Moore Threads who know how to code drivers.

I wish someone would send this to Chips and Cheese, so that they could run a bunch of low-level synthetic tests to tell us the potential of a PowerVR desktop graphics card.

#5
progste

Can't wait to see what kind of driver nightmare a Chinese GPU can turn out to be!

#6
pbupm

the performance is not great , but i guess they have to start somewhere.

#7
ZoneDymo

that is actually surprisingly poor

#8
R-T-B
T0@stPC Watch notes that the card's support for PCIe Gen 5 x 16 (offering up to 128 GB/s bandwidth) is quite surprising, given the early nature of this connection standard.

lolwut. This is the first PCIe 5.0 gpu? WTF? We got beat by a knockoff brand.

#9
pavle

They don't need drivers, they got PCIe 5.0!
Seriously - make a driver for it or let your customer play with Less_threads™?

#10
Bomby569

drivers will be the main issue

#11
kondamin

For the ultimate mobile experience on your desk?

Add your own comment
Moore Threads MTT S80 GPU Benchmarked by PC Watch Japan (2024)

FAQs

How much is the MTT S80? ›

Moore Thread's MTT S80, World's First PCIe Gen 5 Gaming Graphics Card, Now Priced at $164.

How fast is the MTT S80? ›

MTT S80 gaming graphics card comes fully equipped with the advanced ChunXiao chip and houses 4096 MUSA stream processors. Operating at a core frequency of 1.8GHz, it's capable of delivering 14.4 TFLOPS of single-precision floating-point compute power.

What is the TDP of MTT S80? ›

With access to a 256-bit memory interface, the MTT S80, which has a 255W TDP, delivers a memory bandwidth of up to 448 GB/s.

Is the MTT Y2K street legal? ›

MTT produced not only the first turbine-powered street legal motorcycle, but also the most powerful production bike in the world: the MTT Y2K Superbike.

What is the fastest bike in the world MTT 420? ›

MTT 420-RR: This American-made machine is a technological marvel. While not exactly street legal, the MTT 420-RR boasts a turbine engine and a claimed top speed exceeding 435 km/h (270 mph).

How much is a MTT Superbike? ›

While there is no price quoted on the MTT website, it does say that the 2017 Y2K 420RR will be a limited production, of course! Expect it to be priced at £150,000 (approximately over Rs 12.58 crore).

How fast is the cm400 missile? ›

The missile, powered by a single-stage solid-fuel rocket, can reach speeds of Mach 4 during the terminal phase of flight. The CM-400AKG carries an 880-lb (400-kg) warhead and can...

How fast can a MTT 420 RR go? ›

MTT 420-RR

It's pushing the boundaries when it comes to the word “production motorcycle,” however, there's no getting away from the fact the MTT 420-RR is the world's fastest motorcycle with a top speed of more than 273 mph (440 km/h).

Is Moore thread publicly traded? ›

Moore Threads remains a privately held company and cannot be accessed on major public exchanges such as NASDAQ or NYSE.

What is GPU power TDP? ›

What is it? Thermal design power, also known as thermal design point, is defined as the theoretical maximum amount of heat generated by a CPU or GPU that its cooling system is designed to dissipate.

How much is the MTT 420RR? ›

Each MTT 420RR is built to the individual customer's specification, so no two are alike. Naturally, this manner of customization doesn't come cheap and MTT will supply you with a 420RR for the not-insignificant price of around $250,000, depending, of course, on how much carbon fiber you specify.

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