CLX Gaming posts RTX 5070 Ti VENTUS build
- CLX Gaming on May 23 posted a short video showing a custom MSI GeForce RTX 5070 Ti VENTUS 3X PC build, cable routing, and gameplay overlays. (youtube.com) - MSI lists the GeForce RTX 5070 Ti 16G VENTUS 3X OC with a triple-fan TORX Fan 5.0 cooler, while third-party specs put board power at 300W. (msi.com) - The clip remains available through CLX Foundry LIVE Clips, and MSI’s product page carries the card’s official dimensions and cooling details. (youtube.com)
CLX Gaming posted a short build video on May 23 centered on an MSI GeForce RTX 5070 Ti VENTUS 3X system, adding another vendor-made example to the current wave of compact, high-end PC assembly clips. The video, surfaced through CLX Foundry LIVE Clips, shows the card installed in a finished gaming PC and pairs the assembly footage with cable-management shots and on-screen gameplay overlays. (youtube.com) (msi.com) MSI markets the GeForce RTX 5070 Ti 16G VENTUS 3X OC as a Blackwell-based card with a triple-fan thermal design using TORX Fan 5.0, and the company says the VENTUS line is built around an “efficient thermal solution” and a neutral enclosure for broad system compatibility. (youtube.com) That makes the CLX clip less a product launch than a build-focused demonstration of how the card fits into a complete desktop. ### Which hardware details in the clip matter most to builders? MSI’s official product page says the RTX 5070 Ti VENTUS 3X OC uses a three-fan cooler, and third-party specifications list the board at about 303-304 mm long with a 300W board power target. (youtube.com) Those figures are the ones that usually determine whether a build clears the front of the chassis, whether cable bends are manageable, and how much power-supply margin a builder wants. NVIDIA’s small-form-factor guidance says SFF-ready enthusiast GeForce cards should stay within 304 mm length, 50 mm depth and 151 mm height including power-cable bend radius. (msi.com) The MSI VENTUS 3X dimensions cited by review and spec pages place the card close to that envelope, which helps explain why clearance and cable routing are central in a build video built around this model. ### Why does the power-supply discussion show up in a 5070 Ti build? CORSAIR’s current 5070 and 5070 Ti build guide says these cards use the 12V-2x6 connector and recommends power supplies beginning at 750W for that class of system. (msi.com) TechPowerUp’s database entry for MSI’s RTX 5070 Ti VENTUS 3X OC Plus lists a suggested PSU of 700W, while the card’s board power is listed at 300W. That leaves PSU headroom as a practical build question rather than a branding point. A builder choosing CPU tier, fan count, storage and RGB accessories still has to account for transient load, cable access and whether the case gives enough room for a clean 12V-2x6 run. (nvidia.com) CLX’s focus on cable management fits that part of the decision. ### What does the cooling footage add beyond a normal product page? MSI’s listing names TORX Fan 5.0 and positions the card as a straightforward cooling-first design, but product pages do not usually show how the card sits against front fans, radiators or drive cages once installed. (corsair.com) The CLX footage appears aimed at that gap by showing the assembled system rather than only the bare board. NVIDIA said in its SFF-ready guidance that compatibility remains a challenge because spec sheets often do not address clearance for cables and connectors. A build clip that lingers on cooler spacing, front-panel access and cable runs answers that issue more directly than a standalone spec table. (corsair.com) ### How much can viewers infer from the benchmark overlay? CLX’s short video includes gameplay footage with a frame-rate overlay, but the surfaced source does not provide a full benchmark table, test methodology or settings breakdown. That means the clip works better as a visual proof-of-build than as a review-grade performance comparison. (msi.com) MSI’s own page frames the RTX 5070 Ti VENTUS 3X around Blackwell features including DLSS 4.5, Reflex 2 and fourth-generation ray tracing cores, but it does not substitute for title-by-title testing in a controlled review. The on-screen FPS figures in the CLX video should be read in that narrower context. (nvidia.com) ### Where can builders check the next step before copying this setup? CLX’s clip remains available through CLX Foundry LIVE Clips, while MSI’s product page lists the official cooling design and model details for the GeForce RTX 5070 Ti 16G VENTUS 3X OC. NVIDIA’s SFF-ready guidance and current case-and-PSU compatibility pages from vendors such as CORSAIR provide the next checkpoint for anyone trying to match the fit, power and cable-routing choices shown in the video. (youtube.com) (msi.com)