Third party RTX 30 cards are still in the process of being announced, so it’s possible we may yet see some more third party cards adopt a similar design to Nvidia’s three Founders Editions. However, as you can see from the images below, Asus’ upcoming line-up of Dual, TUF Gaming and ROG Strix RTX 30 cards all have their fans in the usual, downward facing position, with a bare backplate facing up toward your CPU. You can still see a smidgen of one of the fans coming through on the back in a couple of Asus’ RTX 30 designs, namely their RTX 3080 and RTX 3090 cards, but it’s still not quite the same as having a full-blown fan on both sides like Nvidia’s Founders Editions. The loss of the dual axial fans is a bit of a bummer in my eyes, especially after Nvidia made such a big deal of it in both last night’s reveal and their RTX 3000 teaser video at the end of last week. In the latter, Nvidia made it sound like the dual axial fans played a pretty big role in helping their Ampere cards hit the lofty performance goals they have for this generation of next-gen graphics cards, and that it was critical to achieving their “breakthrough thermal technology”. It may all be a load of cobblers, of course, as I’ve yet to test any kind of RTX 30 card to see if the fans actually make a difference to their overall performance. Still, if the dual axial design is meant to allow up to 55% more airflow compared to their previous RTX 20 Founders Editions like Nvidia said last night (not to mention being up to 30% more efficient and 3x quieter than the previous generation), I can’t help but feel like having a regular fan design will end up hampering performance in some way. Still, I’m pleased to see that Asus’ RTX 30 cards all have normal 8-pin power connectors like normal, as the initial rumours about Nvidia’s special 12-pin power connector made me think I’d also have to buy a whole new power supply to make use of Nvidia’s new graphics cards. It’s since been confirmed that the Founders Editions of Nvidia’s RTX 30 cards will all come with adapters in the box, thankfully, but part of me is relieved I won’t have to deal with them either way. Again, I’ll have to wait until review samples are available before I can say for sure whether this will also have an impact on third party card performance compared to Nvidia’s Founders Edition cards, but for now I’m just glad that I won’t have to budget for a new PSU on top of everything else. It also gives me hope that the next-gen Big Navi cards due out before the end of the year will also use the same 8-pin connectors, too, as I’ve yet to hear any kind of rumour to imply they’ll follow in Nvidia’s 12-pin footsteps at the moment. As I said earlier, there’s still a chance that some third party RTX 30 cards will come with dual axial fans, but for the time being, it looks as though it’s going to be pretty much business as usual. MSI are also due to show off their RTX 30 cards later today, but their landing page suggests we’ll see a lot of similar designs to the Asus cards above. The same goes for Zotac and Gigabyte, too, which all look pretty similar to their RTX 20 predecessors.