At first glance, the KFA2 RTX 5070 1-Click OC appears competitive on clock speed, running at 2325 MHz base / 2527 MHz turbo versus the MSI RTX 5070 Ti MLG Edition's 2295 MHz / 2452 MHz. However, raw clock speed is only one dimension of GPU performance, and here it tells a misleading story. The Ti is built on a fundamentally larger GPU die, featuring 8960 shading units and 280 TMUs compared to the KFA2's 6144 and 192 respectively — roughly a 46% increase in shader and texture processing resources. This is the hardware that actually executes rendering workloads, and no clock speed advantage on the KFA2's part can bridge that structural gap.
The downstream throughput numbers confirm this clearly. The MSI Ti delivers 43.94 TFLOPS of floating-point performance and a texture rate of 686.6 GTexels/s, versus the KFA2's 31.05 TFLOPS and 485.2 GTexels/s — roughly a 41% lead in both metrics. In practice, this translates to noticeably higher frame rates at demanding resolutions, better headroom for ray tracing workloads, and smoother performance in compute-heavy scenarios. The pixel fill rate gap is somewhat narrower (235.4 vs 202.2 GPixel/s, ~16%), reflecting the Ti's higher ROP count (96 vs 80), which benefits anti-aliasing and high-resolution output specifically. Both cards share an identical GPU memory speed of 1750 MHz and both support Double Precision Floating Point, so neither holds an edge on those fronts.
The MSI RTX 5070 Ti MLG Edition holds a decisive performance advantage in this group. Despite the KFA2's marginally higher boost clock, the Ti's substantially larger execution architecture dominates every throughput metric that matters for gaming and GPU compute tasks. The KFA2 is not a poor performer — it simply belongs to a lower GPU tier, and the specs reflect that honestly.