South African gamers eyeing ATX 3.1 over ATX 3.0 for competitive esports should look past the box claims and at what actually changes during a ranked grind where a single dropped frame costs a duel.

Quick Answer

For competitive esports, ATX 3.1 only pulls clearly ahead of ATX 3.0 when your rig and workload are already built for it. Most SA buyers chasing hold a stable 240fps+ at 1080p with the lowest possible 1% lows see the gap shrink in practice. Budget the difference where it actually moves frames first.

When ATX 3.1 Is Worth It

Pick ATX 3.1 for a current 12V-2x6 GPU and clean transient handling on a new build. If you are doing a ranked grind where a single dropped frame costs a duel on a fresh, well-cooled platform around R2,600, the headroom is genuine and worth banking for the future.

When ATX 3.0 Is The Smart Buy

ATX 3.0 is the value pick for an existing solid PSU that already meets the power-excursion spec. At roughly R2,100 it frees budget for the CPU, GPU or cooling that actually drives hold a stable 240fps+ at 1080p with the lowest possible 1% lows. For most competitive esports setups it is more than enough.

What It Means For SA Builds

For a South African build aimed at hold a stable 240fps+ at 1080p with the lowest possible 1% lows, put your rands where the bottleneck is. The ATX 3.1 versus ATX 3.0 gap is real but narrow for competitive esports; a stronger GPU or more RAM usually shifts frame pacing, input latency and consistency more for the money.

FAQ

Will ATX 3.1 boost my frame rate for competitive esports?

Not on its own. For competitive esports your GPU, CPU and settings drive hold a stable 240fps+ at 1080p with the lowest possible 1% lows far more than ATX 3.1 versus ATX 3.0. Treat it as a small, situational gain.

Is ATX 3.0 already enough for Valorant, CS2 and Apex Legends?

For most setups, yes. ATX 3.0 comfortably supports hold a stable 240fps+ at 1080p with the lowest possible 1% lows in titles like Valorant, CS2 and Apex Legends. Save the difference unless you have a specific reason to go newer.

How much more does ATX 3.1 cost in SA?

Expect roughly R2,600 for the ATX 3.1 option versus about R2,100 for ATX 3.0. Whether that gap is worth it depends on your frame pacing, input latency and consistency.

TIP

SA Buyer Tip

by your bottleneck: if frame pacing, input latency and consistency is your weak point, spend there first, then choose ATX 3.0 or ATX 3.1 with whatever budget is left. Aim for hold a stable 240fps+ at 1080p with the lowest possible 1% lows.