RTX 4070 Ti Super: Sixteen GB of VRAM to Tame 4K Textures

Published on May 18, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

NVIDIA updates its catalog with the GeForce RTX 4070 Ti Super, a card that arrives to fill the gap between the high-end and mid-range. Its main novelty is the jump to 16GB of VRAM memory, a direct increase over its predecessor. This makes it a solid option for those working with 4K resolution textures or editing high-resolution video, where memory becomes a critical resource.

photorealistic technical illustration of a high-end graphics card with 16GB VRAM label on PCB, handling massive 4K texture files in real-time, GPU die glowing under load, heat pipes and copper heatsink visible, cables transmitting data streams, cinematic engineering visualization, dramatic blue and orange lighting, ultra-detailed components, macro shot showing memory modules and power phases, action of texture mapping process demonstrated through abstract data flow lines connecting to a 4K monitor in background, realistic industrial render

Ada Lovelace Architecture and Bandwidth for Dense Workloads 🚀

Under the hood, the 4070 Ti Super uses the AD103 chip, the same as the RTX 4080, but with some processing units disabled. The memory bus is expanded to 256 bits, resulting in a bandwidth of 672 GB/s. This allows handling complex textures and multiple layers in software like DaVinci Resolve or Blender without bottlenecks. Its TDP remains at 285W, a controlled figure for the performance it offers in professional workloads.

The Revenge of the 16GB: Now, Without Side-Eyeing 😅

It's curious that NVIDIA has listened to the pleas after years of selling cards with 8GB as if they were liquid gold. Now, with 16GB, 4K users can breathe easy, even if it means shelling out a bit more. Of course, if you're still editing in 1080p, this graphics card will look at you smugly while you only use half its VRAM to look at memes. Progress, they say, comes with a bill.