From the review I linked:
"GPU Boost is guaranteed to hit 1058MHz in most games. Typically, the GPU will be going much higher. We experienced clock speeds in demo sessions that would raise to 1.150GHz and even 1.2GHz in such games as Battlefield 3. With a GPU frequency increase of that much over base clock you can rest assured it will be a noticeable performance difference." :hmm:
I looked for 1200

That's why I didn't find it. Let me do some testing on mine to make sure, but I don't get anything like 1200Mhz unless I raise the boost clock, then I do sit at 1215Mhz.
Just ran some quick tests. It won't (at least not the EVGA card) raise its clocks to arbitrary clocks until you raise the boost offset. If everything is set default, it appears that the max boost is up to 1097 (which is slightly higher than the published number). If you up the power limit, it still will not pass 1097 in any situation. Once you up the boost offset, it raises the max boost clock. The behavior that they're describing is not happening on the retail parts (at least not the EVGA, or at least not on the one in my pc) until you rase boost clock offset by over 100Mhz. At the default settings, 1097 is the max it will go, light, heavy, medium workload, doesn't matter (actually, any time the card was stressed, the clock raised to 1097 and sat there). 1215 is near the limit for my card, and with a 130Mhz offset, it will do 1228 in rare cases (which would be the 1097 +130, well, 131, but with room for rounding errors in the software), but sits at 1215 most of the time. And if I set it too high above +130, when it tries to clock itself to max, it just crashes.
Now, once you raise the boost offset high enough, it acts exactly as they're describing.
I'd test with BF3, but I won't buy anything off Origin, so I don't have it.