At their core, both the Galax RTX 5070 Ti 1-Click OC and the Inno3D RTX 5070 Ti X3 OC are built on the same silicon foundation, sharing identical base clocks of 2295 MHz, the same 8960 shading units, 280 TMUs, 96 ROPs, and matching memory speeds of 1750 MHz. This means the vast majority of their performance profile is essentially the same, and in practice, most workloads will see no meaningful difference between the two cards.
Where a small but measurable gap opens up is in the GPU boost clock. The Inno3D X3 OC reaches a turbo of 2482 MHz versus the Galax's 2467 MHz — a 15 MHz advantage. This carries through to the derived metrics: the Inno3D edges ahead with 44.48 TFLOPS of floating-point performance versus 44.21 TFLOPS, a 238.3 GPixel/s pixel rate versus 236.8, and a 695 GTexels/s texture rate versus 690.8. In absolute terms, these differences are under 0.7% across the board, which sits firmly below the threshold of perceptibility in gaming frame rates or rendering benchmarks.
The Inno3D X3 OC holds a technical edge in the Performance group, but only on paper. Its marginally higher boost clock translates to slightly better peak throughput across every computed metric. In real-world usage — gaming, creative workloads, or AI inference — both cards will perform identically within run-to-run variance. Users choosing purely on performance should not weigh this difference heavily; other factors like cooling, acoustics, or price-per-frame will matter far more than this sub-1% distinction.