Zotac GEFORCE RTX 4080 SUPER Trinity Black Edition 16GB
Zotac's Trinity Black Edition take on the RTX 4080 SUPER, with triple-fan IceStorm cooling, SPECTRA RGB, and 16GB of GDDR6X for serious 4K gaming.

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A capable 4080 SUPER partner card with strong 4K rasterisation and showpiece RGB lighting, only worth buying at a discount versus the RTX 5080.
Scored within its class as a high-end 4K Nvidia card, not against current-gen 50 series flagships or sub-£700 mid-range GPUs.
What we think
Swipe or tap to explore what we like, what to watch for, and who it's for
How it performs & what it pairs with
Benchmarks against named rivals, plus the build requirements to actually run it
Tested with a Ryzen 7 7800X3D, 32GB DDR5-6000, Windows 11 24H2 on a 1000W PSU. Latest driver at time of testing.
Performance breakdown
Scored relative to the class, not against flagship models
Class average 78
Lowest in class 60
Watch it in action
Who this is right for
Picture yourself in these scenarios. How well does this fit?
What every spec actually means
Numbers translated into real-world impact
Plenty for 4K gaming today, even with ray tracing and heavy texture packs enabled. Won't choke the way 12GB cards already do in some recent releases, though 24GB cards have more long-term headroom.
Substantial power draw, so a quality 850W PSU is the minimum recommendation. Older or weaker power supplies will trip protection circuits under heavy load, especially with a power-hungry CPU.
Modest factory overclock above the reference 4080 SUPER's 2550 boost. Real-world boost clocks under typical gaming load tend to push slightly higher with decent cooling.
High bandwidth thanks to 23 Gbps GDDR6X memory on a 256-bit bus. Comfortable for 4K gaming, only the heaviest path-traced workloads start to push the bus.
Nvidia's third-gen RT cores deliver strong ray tracing for the tier. Combined with DLSS 3 Frame Generation, even heavy RT titles run smoothly at 4K with upscaling enabled.
Not just a suggestion. The 320W TDP and transient power spikes mean an 850W or higher quality PSU is needed for reliable operation, especially when paired with a fast multi-core CPU.
Complete specifications
Verified across manufacturer datasheets and retailer spec tables
Common questions
The things people ask before buying this product
Is Zotac a reliable graphics card brand?
Yes. Zotac has been making Nvidia GPUs for years and sits in the mid-tier of partner brands. Build quality is solid, warranty support is reasonable, and the cards perform identically to premium partner variants.
Is the RTX 4080 SUPER still worth buying in 2026?
Only at a meaningful discount versus the RTX 5080. The 4080 SUPER is still a strong 4K card with excellent DLSS 3 support, but it lacks DLSS 4 multi-frame generation. Let pricing decide.
What PSU do I need for the Trinity Black Edition?
Nvidia recommends 850W and that's the realistic floor. With a power-hungry CPU like a Core i9 or Ryzen 9, step up to a quality 1000W unit. Don't try to scrape by with a 750W PSU here.
How does the Trinity compare to premium partner cards?
Same chip, same gaming performance. The Trinity Black Edition trades premium-tier acoustics and aesthetics for a lower price. If you want absolute best cooling and build, premium partners earn their extra cost on those fronts.
If this isn't quite right
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