Well.. If you're into benchmarking, it does help both for GPU overclocking (it depends on the GPU, though. G71 and G80 are prime candidates) and higher performance. On nForce chipset boards, if you raise the PCI-E frequency up to 130~150MHz and at the same time overclock the HT link so that it doesn't hinder the PCI-E bandwidth, you will actually see a sizeable benefit in benchmarks. It's really only for professional benchers, though, since not many boards and video cards can handle such a high amount of stress. The benefit is more pronounced in SLI setup, where you set both PEG's clocks to 130+MHz and HyperTransport clock to something like 300x5. (instead of 200x5 standard) I tried this once before with 7900 GTX SLI where both PCI-E lane and HT link overclocked almost 40% (PCI-E clock 135, HT link 333x4=1333) - 3DMark06, 3DMark05, and F.E.A.R. bench all showed a healthy boost. Of course it was just an experiment and I would never recommend such a crazy configuration for 24/7.