This will be our last RTX 4090 AIB review before the launch of the RTX 4080, so we're checking out the ASUS TUF Gaming OC model. It's incredibly well built, but does it perform as well as it looks?
Its recommended retail price is an eye-watering $2,000, however — more like the GPU-shortage pricing for the RTX 4090 than that card’s debut price. When that card debuted in October 2022 ...
The RTX 5090 comes with 92 billion transistors, next-gen Tensor Cores and Ray Tracing Cores, and more than double the AI processing speed of the 4090. It also comes with 32GB of shiny new GDDR7 ...
But it’s easy to get whipped up in incredible graphical fidelity without asking one question: What is actually different from the last generation RTX 4090? And most importantly, is it worth the ...
RTX 5090 vs RTX 4090. Until our review lands with a larger sample size and clearer comparisons (keep your eyes peeled), these benchmarks show that RTX 5090 is roughly 32% faster than the RTX 4090 when ...
But hang on. Let's say you'd bought an RTX 4090 at launch just over two years ago. Just to fluff up my argument a bit I'm going to assume you managed to bag one at the $1,600 MSRP. Some people ...
The RTX 5090 offers a 30% raw performance increase over the RTX 4090, while the RTX 5080 is 15% faster than its predecessor. DLSS 4 doubles gaming performance across the series. However ...
NVIDIA thought its GPUs were so impressive as to make a very bold claim, namely that the new mid-range GeForce RTX 5070 is faster than the current flagship GeForce RTX 4090. The GeForce RTX 4090 ...
The 5070 has been advertised to boast RTX 4090-level performance, which is quite a bold claim. The last-gen halo-tier card is faster than any other gaming GPU ever launched, and the 4070 could ...
A newly launched GPU by NVIDIA, the RTX 5090, has gained significant attention, especially in comparison to its predecessor, the RTX 4090. The new GPU offers several interesting improvements; however, ...
Is the upcoming RTX 5070 really offering RTX 4090 series 'performance'? Based on established parlance, the answer is - of course - no, but the reasons behind the claim are straightforward enough ...