I doubt it. I think the best custom 980 Ti's (also water) will OC
far more than Fury X. It's a matter of thermals, and the 980Ti uses less power at stock and has more room to go. That being said, this is $649. The top custom 980 Ti are $700+. AMD should win the $650 battle, but those willing to put more money in I think will find that Nvidia still has the performance crown. The question is if you want to drop extra cash, because Fury X has the best reference cooler and doesn't carry a price premium.
I mean, look at this:
There's no reason this won't beat a Fury X, and of course Titan X unless you custom modify the Titan X to water. Nvidia still holds the the top GPU performance crown if you are willing to pay for it.
Moving on, there's also a Hybrid Water 980Ti: if its cooler is as good as AMD's, should be a faster card:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produ...4487144&cm_re=gtx980ti-_-14-487-144-_-Product
But yeah, $120 premium. The Galaxy HOF card images I posted will probably have a similar extra cost if not higher.
But let's see how this does against $650 980 Ti's at max OC. Or even against typical aftermarket 980Ti's that are still under $700. I'm not even convinced the Fury X will out perform them at Max OC. Even a not so expensive aftermarket 980Ti has very high OC performance.
This card is only $30 more. Fury X is estimated to be 50-55% faster than a 290X, right? Let's take a look at the $680 980Ti:
55% faster / 72% OC
57% faster / 71% faster OC
Unfortunately that's all they tested with OC, but even with its "stock OC" it is right around that 55% faster than 290X (Fury X) speed:
60% faster
65% faster
36% faster
58% faster
Source:
http://hexus.net/tech/reviews/graphics/83819-evga-geforce-gtx-980-ti-superclocked-acx-20/
Who'd spend $650 but not $680? It will be interesting to see how Fury X does max OC against cards like this - because this card OC's well and asks for a reasonable minor premium. Fury X is hybrid water so it should OC faster in a equal playing field, but has less thermal room. It'll be interesting to see who wins the $650 to <$700 battle. Although AMD surely has the noise battle won.