Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Simple GPU hack makes your RTX 3080 laptop 20% more powerful, if you dare

Add as a preferred source on Google

Gamers looking for a little extra performance out of their GeForce RTX 3080-powered notebook can now get it with a simple little tweak. By flashing a vBIOS file from a machine with a higher TDP, gamers can get as much as 20% extra performance from their RTX 3080 laptops.

Gamers posting to China’s Baidu forums have shown that an Asus ROG Zephyrus Duo 15 laptop with an RTX 3080 mobile GPU clocked at 115W TDP can be flashed with a vBIOS from an MSI GE76 system, which has an RTX 3080 card with a 155W TDP. After the new vBIOS was flashed to the Zephyrus, a benchmark taken with the 3DMark Time Spy tool shows that performance was increased by approximately 20%.

Recommended Videos

The reason that this hack was needed — particularly by enthusiast gamers who need to squeeze as much performance out of their GPU as possible — is because the RTX 3080 card inside the Asus-made ROG Zephyrus is limited by its thermal design, with a TDP of 115W that can go as high as 130W with Dynamic Boost. The laptop’s slim form factor means that heat dissipation and thermal regulation could prove to be challenging, and Asus and Nvidia decided to cap the RTX card’s performance for that particular chassis design to keep the system optimal.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

However, Nvidia’s RTX 3000 series mobile cards on a bulkier laptop — which has more space for cooling — could go as high as 150W, which means gamers, graphics designers, and creative professionals can get more performance with a trade-off in size and weight. This hack, in essence, forces the GPU to operate at a higher TDP in a laptop with a slimmer profile.

Because the laptop is forced to operate at a higher TDP, it’s unclear how the system is affected in terms of noise — whether fans have to spin faster or more constantly is unknown — and stability in the long run.

After the vBIOS was flashed, it appears that performance of the tweaked ROG Zephyrus 15 is higher than that of the MSI GE76, which was the laptop originally designed to work with a 150W TDP RTX 3080 GPU, according to Videocardz. The 3DMark results showed that the tweaked Zephyrus 15 placed first, displacing the the MSI system, which fell to seventh place.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

While bumping the TDP and overclocking a system could sometimes lead to higher operating temperatures — which would not be ideal on a mobile system like a laptop — this appears to not be the case. According to PC Gamer, the Zephyrus Duo 15 managed to run at 72-degrees Celsius. Despite the limited success story here, temperatures could still rise over time, and it’s unclear what flashing a vBIOS to a different machine would do to that system’s thermal performance. As with unofficial hacks and tweaks, it might be tomfoolery for an inexperienced hands to try this on their own systems at home, as a lot can potentially go wrong.

Chuong Nguyen
Silicon Valley-based technology reporter and Giants baseball fan who splits his time between Northern California and Southern…
Google rejects alarming report that says its Search AI tools are unsafe for kids
The company says it couldn’t reproduce many of the responses cited and argues that the testing doesn’t reliably measure product safety
Google AI Mode on mobile and desktop

Google has rejected a new report that labels its AI-powered Search features an “unacceptable risk” for children and teenagers.

Common Sense Media’s Youth AI Safety Institute gave AI Overviews and AI Mode its lowest overall rating. The two tools performed poorly against seven of the institute’s eight AI safety principles and failed every category involving potentially severe harm. Google says those findings came from searches that don’t resemble how people normally use its products.

Read more
What should you look for in a printer for high-volume home printing?
From ink costs to wireless printing and scanning, here's how to pick a printer that keeps up with busy households without constant cartridge replacements.
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

This post is brought to you in paid partnership with HP

Most people find out their printer wasn't built for them at the worst possible moment. You need to print something urgent (a permission slip, a tax form, a boarding pass) and you're out of ink. Or low on magenta, which for reasons no one has satisfactorily explained, also blocks you from printing a black-and-white document. You order a cartridge, wait two days, and finally print the thing you needed on Tuesday the following Thursday.

Read more
This AI doesn’t just translate languages, it invents brand-new ones
Forget translating, this AI builds languages from scratch, sounds, grammar, and all.
ConlangCrafter open on laptop

Ever wondered what a language built entirely by AI would sound like? A team of researchers just made a tool that answers exactly that question. A new paper published in the Proceedings of the Association for Computational Linguistics introduces ConlangCrafter, a tool that uses large language models to build brand new languages complete with their own sounds, grammar, and vocabulary.

Morris Alper, the paper's lead author and soon-to-be assistant professor at the University of Miami, explained that the goal was to create languages with features you don't normally find in the ones we already speak. 

Read more