At their core, both the Galax RTX 5070 Ex 1-Click OC and the Palit RTX 5070 Infinity 3 share the same fundamental GPU architecture: identical base clocks of 2325 MHz, the same 6144 shading units, 192 TMUs, 80 ROPs, and matched memory speeds of 1750 MHz. This means neither card has a structural advantage in raw throughput capacity — they are built on the same silicon foundation and will behave identically under sustained, thermally-constrained workloads.
The only meaningful performance differentiator lies in the boost clock. The Galax boosts to 2527 MHz versus the Palit's 2512 MHz — a gap of just 15 MHz, or roughly 0.6%. This marginal difference is directly reflected downstream: the Galax edges ahead with 31.05 TFLOPS of floating-point performance versus 30.87 TFLOPS, and a texture rate of 485.2 GTexels/s versus 482.3 GTexels/s. In practice, these are sub-1% differences that will not produce measurable frame rate deltas in any real-world gaming or rendering scenario — they fall well within normal chip-to-chip variance and benchmark noise.
For this performance group, the Galax holds a technical edge on paper thanks to its slightly higher turbo clock, but it is purely nominal. Both cards will deliver effectively identical real-world performance, and a buyer should not choose between them based on these numbers alone. The decision should come down to cooling solution, noise levels, price, and build quality rather than this negligible clock speed advantage.