Ports/Slots:, 1 USB 2.0, HDMI, USB 3.2 Type-C, Headphone/Microphone Combo Jack
Input/Output: Webcam, Black, RGB KB Standard Keyboard,
Battery: 200W PSU, 3-Cell 52 WHr Battery
Other Features,
Color: Black
Weight: 5lb
Product Dimensions (WxLxH): 10.2 IN x 14.05 IN x 1 IN
Velztorm 1680D Polyester Black Backpack – JS230863
Model: 1680D
Model Number: JS230863
Black | 1680D Polyester
Fits up to 16in Laptop
Zen 4 Gen Ryzen 9 8945HS 4.0GHz Processor (upto 5.2 GHz, 16MB Cache, 8-Cores, 16-Threads, ); GeForce RTX 4070 8GB GDDR6 Dual (Integrated+Dedicated) Graphics, VR Ready 16GB DDR5 SODIMM; 802.11ax Wifi, Bluetooth 5.3, RJ-45, Webcam, RGB KB Standard Keyboard 15.6″ IPS FHD (1920×1080) 144Hz Display; 200W PSU, No, 3-Cell 52 WHr Battery; Black Color 1TB PCIe NVMe SSD; 1 USB 2.0, HDMI, USB 3.2 Type-C, Headphone/Microphone Combo Jack, Windows 11 Home-64, Includes Velztorm 1680D Polyester Black Backpack – JS230863(Constructed with high-quality 1680D polyester;The 1680D polyester material provides a level of water resistance;Featuring sturdy zippers and durable hardware;Ample storage space, Long-lasting durability)
Introducing the MSI Katana A15 AI B8VG-423US AI Gaming Laptop!
Get ready to experience gaming like never before with the MSI Katana A15. This powerful gaming laptop features a 15.6″ 144Hz IPS Full HD display, powered by an AMD Ryzen 9 8945HS processor and a GeForce RTX 4070 8GB graphics card. With 16GB of DDR5 RAM and a lightning-fast 1TB SSD, you’ll have all the power and storage you need for your favorite games.
But the MSI Katana A15 isn’t just about performance – it’s also designed with gamers in mind. The laptop features a customizable RGB keyboard, WiFi 6E connectivity, a built-in webcam, and comes pre-installed with Windows 11 Home.
Plus, when you purchase the MSI Katana A15, you’ll also receive a premium backpack to protect your new gaming laptop on-the-go. Don’t miss out on this ultimate gaming experience – get your hands on the MSI Katana A15 AI B8VG-423US AI Gaming Laptop today!
#MSI #Katana #A15 #B8VG423US #Gaming #Laptop #144Hz #IPS #FHD #Display #AMD #Ryzen #8945HS #GeForce #RTX #8GB #16GB #DDR5 #1TB #SSD #RGB #WiFi #Webcam #Win #Home #wPremium #Backpack,amd wi-fi 6e
Price: $2,999.99 - $2,549.49 (as of Jan 29,2025 22:19:22 UTC – Details)
Beat the best and carve your legacy with the 2023 ROG Strix SCAR 17 top-of-the-line gaming laptop, featuring Windows 11 Pro, an AMD Ryzen 7000 Series processor, and an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 40 Series Laptop GPU for ultimate performance. It has DDR5-4800MHz memory and PCIe 4×4 storage for fast multitasking and loading. The QHD 240Hz/3ms display with Dolby Vision HDR and Adaptive-Sync offers a crystal clear, ultra-fast viewing experience. The ROG Intelligent Cooling system and MUX Switch with Advanced Optimus ensure optimal performance and battery life. The laptop also features a milled aluminum chassis with configurable RGB lighting and ROG icons, making it not only powerful but also stylish. POWER THROUGH ANYTHING – Powered by Windows 11 Pro, an AMD Ryzen 9 7945HX processor, and NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4080 Laptop GPU at 175W Max TGP, the SCAR 17 allows you to handle even the most demanding games with ease. BLAZING FAST MEMORY AND STORAGE – Multitask swiftly with 32GB of DDR5-4800MHz memory and say goodbye to loading times with 2TB of PCIe 4×4 in RAID 0 with a raw throughput up to 7000mb/s. LIGHTNING FAST, CRYSTAL CLEAR DISPLAY – You can’t beat the enemy if you don’t see them coming. The SCAR 17 features an ultra-fast QHD 240Hz/3ms panel and support Dolby Vision HDR, and Adaptive-Sync for a stellar gaming and viewing experience. ROG INTELLIGENT COOLING – To put this amount of power in a gaming laptop, you need an even better cooling solution. The SCAR features upgraded liquid metal on both the CPU and GPU, and a vapor chamber among other premium features, to allow for better sustained performance over long gaming sessions. MUX SWITCH WITH ADVANCED OPTIMUS – A MUX Switch increases laptop gaming performance by routing frames directly to the display, while Advanced Optimus optimizes battery life by switching between GPU modes automatically depending on the task.
Customers say
Customers appreciate the laptop’s good hardware, speed, and functionality. They find it works well, with a great screen quality and smooth refresh rate. Many appreciate its design, gaming capabilities, and quiet operation. However, opinions differ on its cooling and build quality.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Introducing the ASUS ROG Strix Scar 17 (2023) Gaming Laptop: The Ultimate Gaming Powerhouse!
Are you ready to take your gaming experience to the next level? Look no further than the ASUS ROG Strix Scar 17 (2023) Gaming Laptop. This powerhouse of a laptop is packed with top-of-the-line features that will elevate your gaming experience like never before.
Featuring a stunning 17.3” QHD display with a blazing-fast 240Hz refresh rate and 3ms response time, you’ll enjoy crystal-clear visuals and smooth gameplay. The display also covers 100% of the DCI-P3 color gamut, ensuring vibrant and accurate colors for a truly immersive gaming experience.
Under the hood, the ASUS ROG Strix Scar 17 is powered by the latest GeForce RTX 4080 graphics card and an AMD Ryzen 9 7945HX processor, delivering unrivaled performance and graphics capabilities. With 32GB of DDR5 RAM and a massive 2TB PCIe SSD, you’ll have plenty of storage and memory for all your games and multimedia.
Connectivity is a breeze with Wi-Fi 6E support, ensuring fast and stable wireless connections for online gaming and streaming. And with Windows 11 Pro pre-installed, you’ll have access to the latest features and enhancements for a seamless gaming experience.
Don’t settle for anything less than the best – elevate your gaming experience with the ASUS ROG Strix Scar 17 (2023) Gaming Laptop. Get ready to dominate the competition and experience gaming like never before. Get yours today! #ASUSROG #GamingLaptop #RTX4080
#ASUS #ROG #Strix #Scar #Gaming #Laptop #QHD #240Hz3ms #DCIP3 #Display #GeForce #RTX #AMD #Ryzen #7945HX #32GB #DDR5 #2TB #PCIe #SSD #WiFi #Windows #Pro #G733PZXS97,amd wi-fi 6e
Price: $839.00 (as of Jan 29,2025 21:39:28 UTC – Details)
From the brand
We are a leading manufacturer of cutting-edge technology solutions for gamers, creators, and PC enthusiasts.
Yeyian Gaming has perfect solutions to meet everyone’s needs from pre-built PCs to complete custom rigs and from high performance gaming monitors to next generation PCIe Gen 5 power supplies.
Yeyian Gaming PC
Yeyian Gaming Monitor
Yeyian Gaming Accessories
SYSTEM: Intel i5-12400F 6 Cores 12 Threads 4.4 GHz CPU | Intel B660 motherboard | Stock Fan | Windows 11 Home Prebuilt Gaming Desktop GRAPHICS AND MEMORY: RTX 4060 8GB GDDR6 17 Gbps 128 bit Graphics Card | 16GB DDR4 3200Mhz Memory | 1TB NVMe 3 SSD Gamer PCs CASE AND POWER: YEYIAN Lancer Gaming Computer Case | 4x ARGB System Color Adjustable Ring Fans | 650W Gold Certified Power Supply | Case Size 20” x 18.5” x 11” WARRANTY: 2 Year Parts and 3 Year Labor 1 Year Shipping | FREE Lifetime Technical Support | Gaming Desktops Assembled in the USA CONNECTIVITY: 1x USB-C 3.1 | 2x USB 3.0 | 9 X USB 3.2 | 1 x DisplayPort | 1 x HDMI Port | 1 x 2.5Gb Ethernet port | 1 x Wifi Module | 5 x Audio jacks | 1 x Optical S/PDIF out port
Customers say
Customers are satisfied with the computer’s performance and graphics quality. They find it works well without any glitches, and has a nice appearance.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Looking for a powerful pre-built gaming PC that’s perfect for streaming and VR gaming? Look no further than the YEYIAN Tanto Pre Built Gaming PC Desktop Computer!
This beast of a machine is equipped with an Intel Core i5 12400F processor running at 4.4 GHz, an RTX 4060 graphics card, 1TB NVME SSD for lightning-fast storage, 16GB of DDR4 RAM clocked at 3200 MHz, and a 650W Gold PSU to keep everything running smoothly.
With Windows 11 Home 64-bit pre-installed, you’ll have the latest features and updates at your fingertips. Whether you’re streaming your favorite games or diving into the immersive world of VR, this desktop is ready to handle it all.
Don’t settle for anything less than the best when it comes to your gaming setup. Upgrade to the YEYIAN Tanto Pre Built Gaming PC Desktop Computer and experience high-performance gaming like never before. Get yours today!
#YEYIAN #Tanto #Pre #Built #Gaming #Desktop #Computers #Intel #Core #12400F #GHz #RTX #1TB #NVME #SSD #16GB #DDR4 #RAM #650W #Gold #PSU #Windows #Home #64bitfor #Streaming #Ready #Desktops,rgb gaming desktop computer i7 pc 64gb ddr4 1tb ssd nvidia gtx 1070 8gb
win11p
Price: $18.99 (as of Jan 29,2025 20:53:52 UTC – Details)
Product Description
Including:
PCIe 16 pin extension GPU cable Type A*1pcs
or
PCIe 16 pin extension GPU cable Type B*1pcs
Self-adhesive tape *1pcs.
Features:
The COMeap PCIe 16 Pin 90 Degree Angled Connector Power cable is degined to provide a convenient solution for changing the installing direction of PCIe cables.
Length: 7.1-in(18mm)
Gauge: 16AWG standard tinned copper wire, supports up to 600W output. The plug terminals of the graphics card cable are made of alloy copper and tinned material, which is more stable and higher currents;
ASUS Strix 4090 / Strix 4080 / Strix 4070 Ti ASUS TUF 4090 / TUF 4080 / TUF 4070 Ti Alphacool Eisblock Aurora Geforce RTX 4090 TUF with backplate Alphacool Eisblock Aurora Geforce RTX 4090 Strix with backplate
How to choose Type A or Type B?
Please pay attention to the direction of 16 pin adapter. The Type A works with the PCB board without gap, the Type B works with the PCB board having gap.
Note
If it is more than 3mm between the backplate of your GPUs and 16 pin port, our 16 pin 180 degree adapter does not work with your GPUs.
Add to Cart
Add to Cart
Customer Reviews
3.7 out of 5 stars
10
3.7 out of 5 stars
10
3.8 out of 5 stars
40
3.8 out of 5 stars
40
3.8 out of 5 stars
40
3.8 out of 5 stars
40
Price
$20.99$20.99
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— $17.99$17.99
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12VHPWR Type A Power Adapter 12VHPWR Type B Power Adapter 12VHPWR to 4X 8 Pin PCIe Type A Power Adapter 12VHPWR to 4X 8 Pin PCIe Type B Power Adapter 12VHPWR to 4×8 Pin Type A 12VHPWR to 4×8 Pin Type B
『12VHPWR Cable』Designed for GeForce RTX 4090 4080 4070Ti 3090Ti GPU. Providing a convenient solution for changing the installing direction of PCIe cables with the 16 pin 90-degree angled PCIe extension cables; 『Compatibility』The adapter is standard 16 pin PCIe connector, so it works with common non-modular PSUs and semi-modular PSUs with PCIe 16 pin male output cable. It is compatible with 16-pin graphics cards from regular manufacturers such as: ASUS, MSI, Gigabyte, ZOTAC, Sapphire, NVIDIA Tesla GPU, etc.,please refer to the compatible list in the product description about the compatible models; 『Parameter』Length: 7.1-in(18cm), Made by 16AWG standard tinned copper wire, supports up to 600W output. The plug terminals of the graphics card cable are made of alloy copper and tinned material, which is more stable and higher currents; 『Note』There are two directions about 90 degree 16 pin connector, please carefully check the orientation of your GPU. The Type A works with the PCB board without gap, the Type B works with the PCB board having gap. Please refer to the 5th photo about how to choose the Type A or Type B; 『Including』PCIe 16 pin extension GPU cable Type B *1pcs, Self-adhesive tape *1pcs.
Introducing the COMeap 12VHPWR Cable: The Perfect Solution for Your GPU Extension Needs!
Are you looking for a reliable and efficient way to extend the power supply to your high-performance graphics card? Look no further than the COMeap 12VHPWR Cable! This 16 Pin GPU PCIe 5.0 Female to Male Extension cable is designed to provide a seamless and secure connection between your power supply and your GPU, ensuring maximum power delivery and performance.
Featuring a 90-degree angle design, this cable is perfect for tight spaces and will help you achieve a clean and organized build. The 16AWG wire gauge ensures stable power delivery, while the 600W power rating is more than enough to support even the most demanding graphics cards.
This sleeved adapter is specifically designed for 12+4pin RTX 4090, 4080, 4070Ti, and 3090Ti graphic cards, making it the perfect choice for gamers and enthusiasts alike. With a length of 7.1 inches, this Type B cable is the ideal solution for extending the power supply to your GPU without adding unnecessary clutter to your build.
Upgrade your gaming experience with the COMeap 12VHPWR Cable and ensure that your graphics card receives the power it needs to perform at its best. Don’t settle for subpar performance – get the best with COMeap!
#COMeap #12VHPWR #Cable #Pin #GPU #PCIe #Female #Male #Extension #Degree #Angle #16AWG #600W #Sleeved #Adapter #124pin #RTX #4070Ti #3090Ti #Graphic #Card #7.1inch #Type,pcie
5.0
Price: $1,799.00 (as of Jan 29,2025 15:55:55 UTC – Details)
GreatPriceTech sells computers with custom/upgraded configurations to enhance system performance. If the computer has modifications as listed above, then the manufacturer box was opened by our highly skilled technicians for testing and inspection and to install the upgrades according to the specifications as advertised. Both the computers and components are brand new for the upgraded system. 【Upgraded】 Seal is opened for Hardware/Software upgrade only to enhance performance. 16.0″ OLED 2.8K (2880×1800) 120Hz Display; 802.11ax Wifi, Bluetooth 5.3, Integrated Webcam, Backlit Standard Keyboard 【Powerful Performance with Ultra 7-155H 】 14th Gen Ultra 7-155H 3.8GHz Processor (upto 4.8 GHz, 24MB Cache, 16-Cores, 22, 6 Performance-cores); GeForce RTX 3050 4GB GDDR6 Dual (Integrated+Dedicated) Graphics 【High Speed and Multitasking】 32GB OnBoard RAM; 90W Power Supply Type-C Power-In, 4-Cell 90 WHr Battery; Black Color 【Enormous Storage】 1TB PCIe NVMe SSD; HDMI, No Optical Drive, Headphone/Microphone Combo Jack, Windows 11 Pro-64, 1 Year Manufacturer warranty from GreatPriceTech (Professionally upgraded by GreatPriceTech) Includes Authorized Dockztorm Portable USB Hub(Special Edition Portable Dockztorm Data Hub;Super Speedy Data Sync Rate up to 5Gbps)
Introducing the LG Gram Pro AI Laptop with a stunning 16.0″ 120 Hz OLED 2.8K display! This powerhouse of a laptop is equipped with a 16-Core Intel Ultra 7-155H processor, GeForce RTX 3050 graphics, 32GB of LPDDR5X RAM, and a lightning-fast 1TB PCIe SSD.
But that’s not all – this laptop also comes with a backlit keyboard for easy typing in any lighting conditions and Windows 11 Pro for the latest in productivity and security features. And to top it all off, we’ve included a DKZ Hub USB Port Expander so you can easily connect all your devices.
Experience the ultimate in performance, display quality, and connectivity with the LG Gram Pro AI Laptop. Upgrade your computing experience today!
#Gram #Pro #Laptop #OLED #2.8K #Display #16Core #Intel #Ultra #7155H #GeForce #RTX #32GB #LPDDR5X #1TB #PCIe #SSD #Backlit #KYB #Win #Pro #DKZ #Hub #USB #Port #Expander,dkz hub
Price: $2,219.00 (as of Jan 29,2025 15:22:20 UTC – Details)
We sell computers with professional upgrade and customization. The manufacturer box will be opened by our engineers for customizing and testing. Defects blemishes are significantly reduced by our in depth inspection testing Lenovo Legion Pro 5 16 inch WQXGA Gaming Laptop Display: 16″ 240Hz WQXGA (2560 x 1600) Anti-glare 500 nits 100% DCI-P3, DisplayHDR 400, Dolby Vision, FreeSync, G-SYNC, Low Blue Light Dolby Vision Display CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 7945HX 16-Core Processor (Up to 5.4 GHz, 64 MB Smart cache, 16 Cores, 32 Threads) Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 GDDR6 8GB Memory: 64GB DDR5 SDRAM 4800 MHz Hard Drive: 2TB NVMe M.2 SSD Operating System:Windows 11 Home isTouchscreen: No Optical Drive: No Optical Drive Keyboard: 4-Zone RGB Backlit Keyboard with Numpad Wireless Connectivity: Intel Wi-Fi 6E AX211 (2×2) Bluetooth: Bluetooth 5.2 Camera: 1080p FHD Camera with E-Shutter Power: 80Wh Lithium-Ion Battery 300W AC Adapter 2 x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C support Data Transfer / Power Delivery / DisplayPort / 10Gbps 4 x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A (One support Always On) / 5Gbps
1 x RJ-45 1 x HDMI 2.1
1 x Headphone / microphone combo jack (3.5mm)
Size and Weight: 14.31″ L x 10.25″ W x 1.05″ H inches, 5.50 lbs Color: Onyx Grey 1 x Vine Express 32GB USB Drive included
AMD Ryzen 9 7945HX 16-Core Processor (Up to 5.4 GHz, 64 MB Smart cache, 16 Cores, 32 Threads) Upgraded to 64GB DDR5 SDRAM 4800 MHz, 2TB PCI-E NVMe Solid State Drive for Storage. Stunning 16″ 240Hz WQXGA (2560 x 1600) IPS 500 nits Anti-glare, 100% DCI-P3, DisplayHDR 400, Dolby Vision, FreeSync, G-SYNC, Low Blue Light, Dolby Vision Display powered by NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 with 8GB GDDR6 2x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C support Data Transfer / Power Delivery / DisplayPort / 10Gbps, 4x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A (One support Always On) / 5Gbps, 1x RJ-45, 1x HDMI 2.1, 1x Headphone and microphone combo jack Full-Size 4-Zone RGB Backlit Keyboard with Numpad; Intel Wi-Fi 6E AX211 (2×2) and Bluetooth 5.2; 1080p FHD Camera with E-Shutter; 80Whr 4-Cell Lithium-Ion battery (up to 6 hours battery life); 14.31″ x 10.25″ x 1.05″ inches, 5.50 lbs; Onyx Grey; 300W AC Adapter, 1 x Vine Express 32GB USB Drive included
Introducing the Lenovo Legion Pro 5 16″ Gaming Laptop, the ultimate powerhouse for gamers and content creators alike. With its stunning 240Hz display featuring a resolution of 2560×1600, you’ll experience buttery smooth gameplay and crystal-clear visuals.
Powered by the AMD Ryzen 9 7945HX 16-Core processor and NVIDIA RTX 4070 8GB graphics card, this laptop can handle even the most demanding games and tasks with ease. The 64GB of DDR5 RAM ensures seamless multitasking, while the 2TB SSD provides ample storage for all your games, files, and media.
The Legion Pro 5 also features a 4-Zone RGB backlit keyboard for a customizable gaming experience, USB-C connectivity for fast data transfer, and WiFi 6E support for ultra-fast wireless connections. Plus, it comes pre-installed with Windows 11 Home for the latest features and security updates.
Don’t settle for anything less than the best – elevate your gaming experience with the Lenovo Legion Pro 5 16″ Gaming Laptop.
#Lenovo #Legion #Pro #240Hz #2560×1600 #IPS #Gaming #Laptop #AMD #Ryzen #7945HX #16Core #NVIDIA #RTX #8GB #4Zone #RGB #Backlit #USBC #WiFi #64GB #DDR5 #2TB #SSD #Win11 #Home,amd wi-fi 6e
The Nvidia RTX 5080 is like the difficult second album for the RTX Blackwell GPU band. It’s a card that comes in at fully half the price of its RTX 5090 sibling, and presents us with a graphics card which—even more so than the previous card—reminds me very much of its erstwhile last-gen stablemate, the RTX 4080 Super.
I don’t want to have to refer to this second spin of the Blackwell wheel as an ostensible RTX 4080 Ti Super, but there are a ton of similarities between the Ada refresh and this new GB203-powered RTX 5080. And if there was ever a reason for Nvidia not enabling its new Multi Frame Generation technology on RTX 40-series cards, this is the physical embodiment of it. Right now, it’s kinda all the RTX 5080’s got going for it.
But while not a lot has changed between the two cards, that includes the price. We are talking about a GPU which costs half the price of the most powerful consumer graphics card on the planet, and yet notably performs better than half as well. Of course, you’re always going to pay more for that last little bit of ultra-enthusiast power to step up, I just kinda mean you shouldn’t feel too bad if you can only drop $1,000 on a new GPU and not the $2,000+ of the RTX 5090. Poor lamb.
And, of course, there’s AI. But actually useful AI, which makes our games run faster through the magic of AI models and yet still look damn good in the process. Yes, DLSS 4 with its Multi Frame Generation feature is the sign the RTX 5080 will continually tap whenever anyone brings up its striking resemblance to an RTX 4080 Super.
Nvidia RTX 5080: The verdict
(Image credit: Future)
I don’t hate the RTX 5080, it just very much feels like this is an Ada GPU with some tweaked Tensor and RT Cores, an enhanced bit of flip metering silicon in the display engine, and an AI management processor queuing up all the new AI-ness of this neural rendering future of ours. Which we’re going to have to wait and see what those end-user benefits actually end up looking like.
I mean, you wait two and a bit years for a new graphics card architecture and the silicon we’re presented with looks remarkably similar to what went before, but with the promise that it’s got some revolutionary tech baked into it. So long as developers go ahead and make use of it all.
But it’s not like Nvidia hasn’t been upfront about what we should expect with this new chip. It’s just that maybe its overly bombastic initial CES numbers didn’t make it too obvious that MFG was responsible for most of its early perf claims.
It gave us the important specs and the relative gen-on-gen performance figures of a 15% increase over the previous generation at the following Editor’s Day. And that’s what I’ve seen in my own testing, across our new GPU test suite the RTX 5090 is delivering an average 4K gaming performance uplift over the RTX 4080 Super of just over 15%.
Though just 9% and 14% compared with the same card’s performance at 1080p and 1440p respectively.
And it’s not like Nvidia is asking us to pay any more for the new card over the one it’s essentially replacing, like-for-like. Though, I’ve no idea how it could have charged more for this card, given the brakes the green team has put on the silicon development of this GPU, and not ended up with a full-on riot on its hands.
(Image credit: Future)
Seeing 100 fps+ at top 4K settings in Alan Wake 2 and Cyberpunk 2077 is quite something to behold, though the latency in AW2 does highlight a problem we’ll have further down the stack.
I just don’t feel a whole lot of affection for the RTX 5080. Right now, without any neural rendering shiz to actually get excited about, it feels like the GB203 on its own just kinda isn’t trying. It’ll slot in exactly where the RTX 4080 Super did, filling prebuilts and the hearts of those who balk at paying $2K for a GPU, yet are able to convince themselves and their significant others that $1,000 is worth it.
Except it will have far worse stock levels and a likely RTX 50-series premium attached to any build and non-MSRP card. This is definitely a concern for the RTX 5080. While the $999 MSRP means there’s no price hike over the RTX 4080 Super it’s replacing, the manufacturers and retailers will be keen to exploit its initial scarcity and newness by slapping a hefty tax on top of that base MSRP. $1,500 RTX 5080s aren’t going to be uncommon, I would wager.
If it wasn’t for Multi Frame Gen, the RTX 5080 would be a total non-event. But of course there is DLSS4 and MFG here to salve a good chunk of the pain one might be feeling in regard to the relative performance of Nvidia’s second-tier RTX Blackwell card. The still impressive technology smooths out the gaming performance of the RTX 5080 and delivers exceptional high frame rates in all the games I’ve tested it in. Which admittedly isn’t the full 75 games and apps Nvidia has been promising, but the innovative DLSS Override feature of the Nvidia App isn’t working even on the review drivers.
But seeing 100 fps+ at top 4K settings in Alan Wake 2 and Cyberpunk 2077 is quite something to behold, though the latency in AW2 does highlight a problem we’ll have further down the stack. So long as that level of performance uplift remains consistent across all the supported MFG games in its long list of Day 1 supporting titles, then there are going to be a huge volume of games where the actual gaming experience of running the RTX 5080 will feel entirely different to that of the RTX 4080 Super.
And that is where we have to end up, because however I might feel about the lack of tangible silicon advancement with the RTX 5080’s GPU, what it’s going to feel like when the average gamer gets the card slapped into their PC is arguably all that really matters.
So, if you’ve ever entertained the thought of spending $1,000 on an RTX 4080 Super, then this is the obvious next object of your affections. It’s a like-for-like drop-in GPU, with an MFG magic trick, which is just as effective and strangely unexciting as that sounds.
Nvidia RTX 5080: The specs
(Image credit: Future)
The overall RTX Blackwell architecture remains the same as with the previous card, and I’ve covered that in some depth in my RTX 5090 review. Suffice to say, the big change is the fact the shaders are now to be given direct access to the Tensor Cores of an Nvidia GPU—rather than relying on CUDA programming—which will allow a level of AI game integration we’ve not seen before.
You’re also getting a dedicated AI management processor (AMP) inside the chip which allows it to regulate and schedule AI and standard graphics workloads so that it can still do all your DLSS and Frame Generation tasks alongside the other neural rendering stuff it’s going to be tasked with when RTX Neural Skin, RTX Neural Materials, RTX Neural Faces, and RTX Neural Radiance Cache come into the picture in future gameworlds.
(Image credit: Nvidia)
You can also kinda include Multi Frame Generation as part of this architecture, for now at least. Since it is entirely locked down to the RTX 50-series, the skinny is that MFG is only possible at these PC latency levels because of the power of the 5th Gen Tensor Cores, that AMP scheduler, and the enhanced flip metering capabilities of the RTX Blackwell silicon inside the GB203 GPU inside the RTX 5080.
I’ve said it’s like magic before, but that’s doing the Nvidia engineers who worked on it a disservice. The ability to generate up to three extra frames between every two that are rendered is impressive on its own, but being able to do so without adding a ton of extra latency into the picture, pacing it perfectly, and with only some very minor artifacting at worst is something else.
It’s this feature which entirely makes the RTX 5080 as it is, without it you would have a very different GPU, or at least a much cheaper card. But whatever took its place, you wouldn’t have a card that could hit 100 fps+ in the latest games at their top 4K settings.
Swipe to scroll horizontally
RTX 5080 specifications
Header Cell – Column 0
RTX 5080
RTX 4080 Super
RTX 5090
RTX 5070 Ti
GPU
GB203
AD103
GB202
GB203
CUDA cores
10752
10240
21760
8960
Boost clock (GHz)
2.62
2.55
2.41
2.45
Base clock (GHz)
2.3
2.295
2.01
2.30
Tensor core TOPS (FP16)
225
209
419
176
Ray tracing core TFLOPS
171
121
318
133
Memory
16 GB GDDR7
16 GB GDDR6X
32 GB GDDR7
16 GB GDDR7
Memory bus width
256-bit
256-bit
512-bit
256-bit
Memory bandwidth (GB/s)
960
736
1792
896
Total Graphics Power (watts)
360
320
575
300
Required system power (PSU wattage)
850
750
1000
750
Power connector
1x 450 W PCIe Gen 5 OR 3x PCIe 8-pin adapter
1x 450 W PCIe Gen 5 OR 3x PCIe 8-pin adapter
1x 600 W PCIe Gen 5 OR 4x PCIe 8-pin adapter
1x 300 W PCIe Gen 5 OR 2x PCIe 8-pin adapter
Price
$999
$999
$1,999
$749
So what is this GB203 GPU about, then? Well, it’s got 5% more cores than the RTX 4080 Super, with 10752 CUDA cores inside it. Despite rocking the same TSMC custom 4N lithography, it’s also a smaller chip, if only by a smidge. There are 45.6 billion transistors inside the GB203 where there are 45.9 billion inside the AD103 chip, and in terms of total die size we’re looking at 378mm2 compared with 378.6mm2.
It’s also worth noting the RTX 5080 is using the full GB203 GPU; given the scale of the chip and the maturity of the 4N process, that’s probably not a huge surprise. But what it does mean is that any future RTX 5080 Super refresh is going to have to be running on either the GB202 or an entirely new chip. Which would also mean you’d either have to jam a lot more memory in there or use 1 GB dies to fill the 512-bit bus to match the same 16 GB.
So yes, you are still getting the same 16 GB of VRAM in the card as you did with the RTX 4080/Super cards, except this time you’re getting GDDR7 instead of GDDR6X, running at 30 Gbps versus 21 and 23 for the previous Ada cards. That means there’s a fair chunk more memory bandwidth available to the Blackwell chip.
There are some other tweaks inside the GB203 silicon which separates it from the AD103 chip of the RTX 4080 Super. There are more texture units, which means more texture processing power, and more L1 cache. Though you are looking at the same 65 MB level of L2 cache across the chip.
Nvidia is throwing a bit more power at the card, too, with the TGP rated at 360 W versus 320 W for the RTX 4080 Super. And that means the recommended PSU specs have risen by 100 W, too. That 750 W might not be enough to keep your new GPU fed, y’know.
Nvidia RTX 5080: The performance
(Image credit: Future)
In line with the extra power Nvidia is jamming through the card, the extra memory bandwidth, and handful of extra cores, the overall gen-on-gen performance of the RTX 5080 is exactly what the green team said it would be. I’m getting a reliable 15% 4K gaming performance boost on average across our test suite.
Yeah, if you were hoping for RTX 4090 performance from the second-tier RTX Blackwell card then you’re going to be disappointed.
If that sounds largely unexciting in percentage terms, it gets even less so when you look at the raw frame rates. When you’re going from 47 fps to 55 fps or 31 fps to 36 fps it stops looking like any kind of tangible generational improvement in gaming performance. It’s certainly not exactly going to set hearts aflame with acquisitional zeal.
Anyone on a relative RTX 40-series GPU will likely be pleased to see that; taking the pressure of any niggling desire to upgrade their already expensive graphics card.
The performance delta—as with the RTX 5090—shrinks as we drop down the resolution scale. At 1080p and 1440p it drops to 9% and a touch under 14% respectively. At least if you’re going to be running at 4K with DLSS Quality you’re going to see a similar performance bump as at 4K native.
But the performance picture changes dramatically once you start to look at what Multi Frame Generation does to the card’s frame rates. Going from 20 fps at 4K native to 130 fps with RT Overdrive in Cyberpunk 2077 and DLSS Quality with 4x MFG really does give you the generational improvement we’ve been craving. And it looks great, too, even the 67 ms latency is absolutely fine.
As much as it sometimes feel like magic, MFG is not.
What I will say about latency, however, is that the Alan Wake 2 numbers do highlight a potential issue for MFG being the frame rate panacea of the lower class RTX 50-series GPUs. For AW2, I left it on the same extreme settings as the RTX 5090, which is honestly too demanding for the RTX 5080.
It gets just 19 fps natively, and only 35 fps when you turn on DLSS. Sure, you’ll hit 117 fps when you slap 4x FG on the table, but the native latency is too high for DLSS to bring it down enough for frame gen’s subsequent latency to be truly palatable. At 102 ms you could maybe get away with it on something like Alan Wake 2, but it’s definitely stretching things for me.
Again we have to come back to where frame generation features inevitably fall down. As much as it sometimes feel like magic, MFG is not; if you don’t have a high enough input frame rate the final latency is going to be utterly punitive even if the fps figures look good.
For the weaker cards in the RTX 50-series it does feel like MFG is going to be a little less exciting an advance. Though we’ll have to wait and see how it holds up on the RTX 5070/Ti when they arrive in February.
It’s also worth noting that, while 75 apps and games with DLSS 4 and MFG support at launch is great, it’s notably not all games that sport Nvidia’s Frame Generation. The DLSS Override setup in the Nvidia App is great and impressively comprehensive, but it needs game support, and can’t just be used to add MFG into any existing Frame Gen game.
Black Myth Wukong is a popular modern title, and a graphically intensive one, too. It sports Nvidia’s Frame Gen technology but is notable by its absence from the list of native or DLSS Override supporting games. While Bears in Space is there. Good ol’ Bears in Space.
It’s only one game, but it’s an example of where the RTX 5080 isn’t going to feel like a step up over the RTX 4080 Super even when you flip the Frame Gen switch.
System-wise, that extra 15% performance bump comes with both a steady rise in power demands and in temperature. Granted that last is mostly down to the fact that the Founders Edition comes in a dual-slot configuration as opposed to the chonky triple slot cooling array of the RTX 4080/Super cards. The cooling on the big boi was certainly more effective, but I will say I’ll happily take 71°C over 63°C if the card itself is so much smaller.
If the gen-on-gen gaming performance doesn’t excite you then the card’s creator chops are going to leave you utterly cold. When it comes to raw rendering performance, its Blender performance is around 12% higher than the RTX 4080 Super. And then on the AI side, it’s only 5% better off in the PugetBench for DaVinci Resolve tests, though is at least 14% faster than the Ada card when it comes to AI image generation with the Stable Diffusion 1.5 benchmark.
Nvidia RTX 5080: Analysis
(Image credit: Future)
What would Nvidia have done if Multi Frame Generation didn’t work out? Brian Catanzaro freely admitted at the Editor’s Day during CES 2025 that it was not something Nvidia could have done around the Ada launch.
“Why didn’t DLSS 3 launch with Multi Frame Generation?” He asks. “And the answer is, we didn’t know how to make the experience good.”
Catanzaro notes that there were two big problems it needed to solve to make Multi Frame Generation a workable solution to a lack of big GPU silicon advances.
“One is that the image quality wasn’t good enough. And when you think about it, when you’re generating multiple frames, the amount of time you’re looking at generating frames is much higher, and so if there’s artifacts, they’re going to really stand out. But then secondly, we have this issue with frame pacing.”
Nvidia solved the issues with a shift to a new AI model for its Frame Generation feature to help deal with motion artifacts, the new transformer model for resolving the image, and flip metering to ensure the extra frames are slotted in smoothly, and all without adding too much over 2x Frame Gen in terms of PC latency.
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(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
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(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
It’s lucky for Nvidia’s gaming division’s bottom line it’s got such smart folk working for it who could solve the issues with Multi Frame Generation
The work Nvidia has done in making Multi Frame Generation work is truly impressive, but if that hadn’t worked out what sort of GPU generation would we have in place of the current crop of RTX Blackwell chips? Maybe the RTX 5090 wouldn’t have been much different; you’d still get the extra silicon, the extra VRAM, and essentially a rendering, gaming monster of a card, though with only 30% higher overall performance.
It would likely have been tough to cost it higher than the RTX 4090 at $1,600, however, given the relative performance increase.
Things would have to have been different for the RTX 5080 and its GB203 GPU, though. This is the full chip being used at launch, which means there’s no more headroom here to offer more than the 15% 4K performance bump that it offers over the RTX 4080 Super. There’s no way it could have been released for the same $999 with such a slight bump and no MFG in sight.
Or else it would have had to be an entirely different, much more powerful GPU. And that would have necessarily translated further down the RTX 50-series stack, too.
It’s good that, despite being half the price of the RTX 5090, the RTX 5080 isn’t delivering half the performance; it’s better than that. The RTX 5090 is some 50% quicker than the second-tier RTX Blackwell card. Though what I will say is that the price delta was much lower between RTX 4080 Super and RTX 4090, and the top Ada was only 35% quicker. So, that gen-on-gen comparison isn’t too favourable for the RTX 50-series, either.
In reality, it’s a moot point. I guess it’s lucky for Nvidia’s gaming division’s bottom line it’s got such smart folk working for it who could solve the issues with Multi Frame Generation in time for the RTX 50-series launch.
In the end, Multi Frame Generation exists, and the RTX 5080 is the silicon you’re going to get because of the experience and extreme level of performance it can offer in the games that can exploit DLSS 4 and MFG. Thank Jen-Hsun for AI, eh?
Nvidia RTX 5080 Founders Edition: The Ultimate Gaming Graphics Card
Nvidia has once again raised the bar with the release of their latest flagship graphics card, the RTX 5080 Founders Edition. Packed with cutting-edge technology and performance enhancements, this powerhouse GPU is set to revolutionize the gaming experience for PC enthusiasts.
Featuring Nvidia’s next-generation Ampere architecture, the RTX 5080 boasts a significant increase in CUDA cores, RT cores, and Tensor cores, delivering unrivaled levels of performance and realism in games. With a whopping 24GB of GDDR6X memory, this card ensures smooth gameplay even at the highest resolutions and settings.
In terms of design, the Founders Edition sports a sleek and futuristic look, with a dual-fan cooling system that keeps temperatures in check even during intense gaming sessions. The card also features RGB lighting that can be customized to match your setup.
When it comes to performance, the RTX 5080 Founders Edition excels in every aspect. Whether you’re playing the latest AAA titles at 4K resolution or diving into the world of ray tracing and DLSS, this card delivers smooth and immersive gameplay like never before.
Overall, the Nvidia RTX 5080 Founders Edition is a true powerhouse that sets a new standard for gaming graphics cards. With its cutting-edge technology, stunning performance, and sleek design, this GPU is a must-have for any serious PC gamer.
The Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 Founders Edition takes the honor guard position for the RTX 5090. In times past, the penultimate Nvidia GPU of each generation has often been the best overall pick. But the gap between first and second place has widened significantly in the past two generations, at least for 4K gaming and other demanding workloads. The 5080 also takes over from the RTX 4080 and RTX 4080 Super, often with only modest gains. It may still be one of the best graphics cards when the dust clears, but it doesn’t have the wow factor of its big brother.
Both the RTX 5080 and RTX 5090 will go on sale tomorrow, January 30, 2025. While we anticipate a lot of demand for the halo card, the 5080 will hopefully be more readily available — but probably only after the initial wave of eager buyers clears. And there’s still the risk that businesses looking for affordable AI hardware might drive inventory shortages because while the 5080 can’t match a 5090 in raw performance, two of them would certainly provide plenty of computing for nominally the same price.
RTX 5080 will have the same core feature set, meaning stuff like native FP4 support that could entice AI researchers and developers. But it still ‘only’ has 16GB of VRAM, and many AI models tend to be voracious when it comes to memory requirements — though DeepSeek has certainly shaken many of the foundational thoughts about AI training and inference, as well as Nvidia’s stock price.
We were extremely crunched for time on the RTX 5090 review, and things have only been slightly better on the RTX 5080. There’s still a lot to dissect, and unfortunately, we can’t shake the feeling that the initial Blackwell drivers are holding the cards back. The 1080p results are particularly bad at times, and Nvidia’s heavy reliance on Multi Frame Generation (MFG) for the initial performance preview suggests that was probably at the forefront of the driver team’s work, rather than general performance.
You can check the boxout with additional links and information on the Nvidia Blackwell and RTX 50-series GPUs. The succinct story for the RTX 5080 is that, outside of certain AI workloads and MFG, it’s currently a pretty minor upgrade over the prior generation 4080 cards. (The 4080 Super was only a few percent faster, with its primary attraction being a $200 price cut compared to the vanilla model.) The specs basically say most of what you need to know.
Swipe to scroll horizontally
Graphics Card
RTX 5080
RTX 4080 Super
RTX 4080
RTX 3080 Ti
RTX 3080 12GB
RTX 3080
RTX 2080 Super
RTX 2080
Architecture
GB203
AD103
AD103
GA102
GA102
GA102
TU104
TU104
Process Technology
TSMC 4N
TSMC 4N
TSMC 4N
Samsung 8N
Samsung 8N
Samsung 8N
TSMC 12FFN
TSMC 12FFN
Transistors (Billion)
45.6
45.9
45.9
28.3
28.3
28.3
13.6
13.6
Die size (mm^2)
378
378.6
378.6
628.4
628.4
628.4
545
545
SMs / CUs / Xe-Cores
84
80
76
80
70
68
48
46
GPU Shaders (ALUs)
10752
10240
9728
10240
8960
8704
3072
2944
Tensor / AI Cores
336
320
304
320
280
272
384
368
Ray Tracing Cores
84
80
76
80
70
68
48
46
Boost Clock (MHz)
2617
2550
2505
1665
1845
1710
1815
1800
VRAM Speed (Gbps)
30
23
22.4
19
19
19
15.5
14
VRAM (GB)
16
16
16
12
12
10
8
8
VRAM Bus Width
256
256
256
384
384
320
256
256
L2 / Infinity Cache
64
64
64
6
6
5
4
4
Render Output Units
112
112
112
112
96
96
64
64
Texture Mapping Units
336
320
304
320
280
272
192
184
TFLOPS FP32 (Boost)
56.3
52.2
48.7
34.1
33.1
29.8
11.2
10.6
TFLOPS FP16 (FP4/FP8 TFLOPS)
450 (1801)
418 (836)
390 (780)
273
264
238
89
85
Bandwidth (GB/s)
960
736
717
912
912
760
496
448
TBP (watts)
360
320
320
350
350
320
250
215
Launch Date
Jan 2025
Jan 2024
Nov 2022
Jun 2021
Jan 2022
Sep 2020
Jul 2019
Sep 2018
Launch Price
$999
$999
$1,199
$1,199
N/A
$699
$699
$699-$799
The biggest change, outside of AI and MFG, is support for faster GDDR7 memory. The RTX 5080 has 960 GB/s of bandwidth, compared to 736 GB/s on the 4080 Super and 717 GB/s on the original 4080. So, depending on your point of reference, that’s 30–34 percent more bandwidth, a pretty sizeable upgrade.
But in core processing power, ignoring the new native FP4 number format support, the upgrades are far less impressive. RTX 5080 has 84 Streaming Multiprocessors (SMs) and 10752 CUDA cores, compared to the 4080 Super’s 80 SMs and the 4080’s 76 SMs. Clock speeds are slightly higher in theory, but in practice, it’s mostly a wash. Raw compute ends up being 8% more than the 4080 Super and 16% more than the 4080.
Most of the other specs scale with the number of SMs, so there’s a similar potential 8% and 16% uplift in tensor compute for the existing FP8, FP16, and other formats. However, Blackwell adds native FP4 support (Ada relied on FP4 running as an FP8 calculation), which doubles the potential throughput if you don’t need the higher precision of FP8. That’s where the 1.8 petaFLOPS of compute comes from, compared to just 836 teraFLOPS on the 4080 Super.
ROPS is the same 112 count on the 5080 and 4080-class GPUs, so pixel shading throughput hasn’t changed. Ray tracing, on the other hand, sees another doubling in ray/triangle intersection calculations, and Nvidia says the 5080 offers 170.6 teraFLOPS of RT compute, compared to 121 and 113 teraFLOPS of RT on the 4080 Super and 4080, respectively.
There’s also a new PCIe 5.0 interface, though that shouldn’t matter much for most tasks. The biggest benefit will be for multi-GPU configurations running AI and GPGPU tasks — not for gaming, which no longer has NVLink or multi-GPU support. Power consumption also sees a modest bump from 320W with the previous generation to 360W with the 5080.
(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)
The good news is that the RTX 5080 won’t cost more than the outgoing RTX 4080 Super. Or that’s the theory. It’s really going to depend on supply and demand, and as we’ve seen with the dwindling inventories of RTX 4080 and 4090 parts over the past few months, there’s still enough demand to push prices up if Nvidia doesn’t provide an adequate supply. And, much to no one’s surprise, Nvidia says the 5090 and 5080 may experience stock shortages in the coming days.
Why isn’t that a surprise? Because there’s a limited number of TSMC wafers to go around right now. Every GB202 or GB203 wafer that Nvidia orders mean one less GB200 wafer and Nvidia previously said its Blackwell B200 supply is already allocated for 2025. That means there’s limited incentive to produce a bunch of consumer GPUs that sell for an order of magnitude less money than the most powerful data center parts.
That means we’ll likely see third-party AIB (add-in board) partner cards selling for far more than the base $999 MSRP of the RTX 5080. There are already hints that some card models could cost $1,399 or more, and if there’s a supply deficit, then we aren’t likely to see many base-price cards after the initial stock lands. Hopefully, the shortages won’t be as severe as we saw with the 3080 cards in 2020–2021 (those were driven by cryptomining), but only time will tell.
For now, let’s take a closer look at the RTX 5080 Founders Edition, and then we’ll hit the benchmarks.
The Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 Founders Edition is the latest offering from Nvidia in the high-end graphics card market. With incremental gains over the previous generation, this card promises to deliver top-notch performance for gaming, content creation, and more.
In terms of specifications, the RTX 5080 boasts a significant increase in CUDA cores, RT cores, and Tensor cores compared to its predecessor. This translates to improved performance in ray tracing, AI processing, and overall graphical fidelity. The card also features faster memory speeds and increased VRAM capacity, allowing for smoother gameplay and better multitasking capabilities.
In terms of gaming performance, the RTX 5080 delivers impressive frame rates at 4K resolution in the latest AAA titles. Ray tracing and DLSS technologies further enhance visual quality and performance, making for a truly immersive gaming experience. Content creators will also benefit from the card’s improved performance in rendering, video editing, and other demanding tasks.
The design of the Founders Edition card is sleek and modern, with a dual-fan cooling system that ensures efficient heat dissipation and quiet operation. The card also features a customizable RGB lighting system, allowing users to personalize their setup to their liking.
Overall, the Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 Founders Edition is a solid choice for gamers and content creators looking for top-tier performance. While the gains over the previous generation may be incremental, they are still significant enough to justify the upgrade for those seeking the best possible experience.
It’s been two years since NVIDIA introduced its Ada Lovelace GPUs, kicking things off with the RTX 4090 and finishing up the initial lineup with the SUPER family At CES, the company unveiled its new RTX 50 “Blackwell” family which features a brand new architecture and several changes such as new cores, AI accelerators, new memory standards, and the latest video/display capabilities.
Today, NVIDIA is releasing the second fastest card within its “RTX 50” portfolio, the GeForce RTX 5080. The GeForce RTX 5080 is a top-of-the-line graphics card, designed for enthusiast gamers, and features a price point of $999 US which is the same as the RTX 4080 SUPER. Today, we will be trying out GALAX GeForce RTX 5080 1-Click OC, a custom variant designed with a ton of cooling potential and retails for a premium.
NVIDIA GeForce GPU Segment/Tier Prices
Graphics Segment
2025
2023-2024
2022-2023
2021-2022
2020-2021
2019-2020
2018-2019
2017-2018
Titan Tier
GeForce RTX 5090
GeForce RTX 4090
GeForce RTX 4090
GeForce RTX 3090 Ti GeForce RTX 3090
GeForce RTX 3090
Titan RTX (Turing)
Titan V (Volta)
Titan Xp (Pascal)
Price
$1999 US
$1599 US
$1599 US
$1999 US $1499 US
$1499 US
$2499 US
$2999 US
$1199 US
Ultra Enthusiast Tier
GeForce RTX 5080
GeForce RTX 4080 SUPER
GeForce RTX 4080
GeForce RTX 3080 Ti
GeForce RTX 3080 Ti
GeForce RTX 2080 Ti
GeForce RTX 2080 Ti
GeForce GTX 1080 Ti
Price
$999 US
$999 US
$1199 US
$1199 US
$1199 US
$999 US
$999 US
$699 US
Enthusiast Tier
GeForce RTX 5070 Ti
GeForce RTX 4070 Ti SUPER
GeForce RTX 4070 Ti
GeForce RTX 3080 12 GB
GeForce RTX 3080 10 GB
GeForce RTX 2080 SUPER
GeForce RTX 2080
GeForce GTX 1080
Price
$749 US
$799 US
$799 US
$799 US
$699 US
$699 US
$699 US
$549 US
High-End Tier
GeForce RTX 5070
GeForce RTX 4070 SUPER GeForce RTX 4070
GeForce RTX 4070 GeForce RTX 4060 Ti 16 GB
GeForce RTX 3070 Ti GeForce RTX 3070
GeForce RTX 3070 Ti GeForce RTX 3070
GeForce RTX 2070 SUPER
GeForce RTX 2070
GeForce GTX 1070
Price
$549 US
$599 $549
$599 US $499 US
$599 $499
$599 $499
$499 US
$499 US
$379 US
Mainstream Tier
GeForce RTX 5060 Ti
GeForce RTX 4060 Ti GeForce RTX 4060
GeForce RTX 4060 Ti GeForce RTX 4060
GeForce RTX 3060 Ti GeForce RTX 3060 12 GB
GeForce RTX 3060 Ti GeForce RTX 3060 12 GB
GeForce RTX 2060 SUPER GeForce RTX 2060 GeForce GTX 1660 Ti GeForce GTX 1660 SUPER GeForce GTX 1660
GeForce GTX 1060
GeForce GTX 1060
Price
TBD
$449 $299
$399 US $299 US
$399 US $329 US
$399 US $329 US
$399 US $349 US $279 US $229 US $219 US
$249 US
$249 US
Entry Tier
GeForce RTX 5060
RTX 3050 8 GB RTX 3050 6 GB
RTX 3050
RTX 3050
GTX 1650 SUPER GTX 1650
GTX 1650 SUPER GTX 1650
GTX 1050 Ti GTX 1050
GTX 1050 Ti GTX 1050
Price
TBD
$229 $179
$249 US
$249 US
$159 US $149 US
$159 US $149 US
$139 US $109 US
$139 US $109 US
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 SUPER Gaming Graphics Cards
With Blackwell, NVIDIA is going full-on into the AI segment with loads of optimizations & AI-specific accelerators.
The Blackwell GPU does many traditional things that we would expect from a GPU, but simultaneously breaks the barrier when it comes to untraditional GPU operations. To sum up some features:
New Streaming Multiprocessor (SM)
New 5th Gen Tensor Cores
New 4th Gen RT (Ray Tracing) Cores
AI Management Processor
Max-Q Mode for Desktops & Laptops
New GDDR7 High-Performance Memory Subsystem
New DP2.1b Display Engine & Next-Gen NVENC/NVDEC
The technologies mentioned above are some of the main building blocks of the Blackwell GPU, but there’s more within the graphics core itself which we will talk about in detail so let’s get started.
Are you in the market for a powerful and sleek GPU for your gaming setup? Look no further than the GALAX NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 1-Click OC White GPU. In this review, we’ll dive into the features, performance, and overall experience of this impressive graphics card.
First and foremost, let’s talk about the design of the GALAX RTX 5080. The all-white aesthetics with RGB lighting accents make it a standout piece in any build. The triple-fan cooling system keeps the GPU running cool and quiet even under heavy loads, ensuring optimal performance at all times.
When it comes to performance, the RTX 5080 doesn’t disappoint. With 12GB of GDDR6X memory and 8704 CUDA cores, this GPU delivers stunning visuals and smooth gameplay in the latest AAA titles. The 1-Click OC feature allows for easy overclocking, pushing the card to its limits without any hassle.
In terms of connectivity, the RTX 5080 offers a range of ports including HDMI 2.1 and DisplayPort 1.4a, making it compatible with the latest monitors and VR headsets. The support for real-time ray tracing and DLSS 2.0 further enhances the visual fidelity of games, immersing you in a lifelike gaming experience.
Overall, the GALAX NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5080 1-Click OC White GPU is a fantastic choice for gamers and content creators alike. Its powerful performance, stylish design, and ease of use make it a top contender in the GPU market. Upgrade your setup with the RTX 5080 and elevate your gaming experience to the next level.
Nvidia’s new RTX 5080 graphics card isn’t as exciting as I was hoping it would be. While the sleek new Founders Edition redesign dramatically shrinks the size of the card compared to the RTX 4080 and RTX 4080 Super, you’re getting the same 16GB of VRAM and only small performance improvements over the previous generation of cards.
The RTX 5080, which arrives January 30th for $999, is about 15 percent faster than the RTX 4080 at 4K without the use of any AI-powered upscaling tricks. While the RTX 4080 managed to beat the RTX 3090, and the RTX 3080 dethroned the RTX 2080 Ti, the RTX 5080 isn’t enough to topple the RTX 4090. Nvidia has built up an expectation that the 80-series card will surpass the previous generation’s flagship, and that’s simply not the case this time around.
The RTX 5080 does comfortably beat its only competition at this price point: the $999 AMD RX Radeon 9700 XTX. That makes the RTX 5080 a good card for 4K if you’re willing to drop settings in some games and more GPU than you probably need for 1440p. For meaningfully better 4K performance, you’ll have to spend $2,000 on the RTX 5090.
If you’re upgrading to the RTX 5080 from the RTX 3080 or RTX 3080 Ti, expect to see average performance gains of more than 50 percent at 1440p and 4K. If you want more than that, you’ll have to rely on Nvidia’s new DLSS 4 and Multi Frame Gen to create more frames with AI models. As we work our way down the RTX 50-series lineup, it increasingly feels like Multi Frame Gen is going to be the main talking point.
$1000
The Good
Sleek two-slot design
DLSS 4 and Multi Frame Gen
Good average power draw in games
The Bad
16GB of VRAM
Not a big performance boost over the RTX 4080
The RTX 5080 Founders Edition model looks identical to the RTX 5090. It’s dramatically thinner than the RTX 4080 it succeeds, shrinking from a three-slot design down to two slots. I really like this redesign, which includes double flowthrough fans that exhaust air above the RTX 5080 into the case instead of out of the top and back of the card.
The RTX 5080 has an angled power connector.
Just like the RTX 5090, Nvidia has slightly angled the power connector on the RTX 5080 so it’s easier to fit into a variety of cases. The included dongle, which converts three eight-pin PCIe power cables to fit the card’s 12VHPWR connector, has slightly more flexible cables than the one that shipped with the 40-series cards. You can also ditch the dongle and get a 12V-2×6 or 12VHPWR cable that connects directly to your power supply.
It’s disappointing to see Nvidia has stuck with 16GB of VRAM on the RTX 5080. AMD’s RX 7900 XTX offers 24GB, and while the RTX 5080 delivers better performance for now, it may well hit video memory limits in 4K gaming in the future.
Nvidia has moved the RTX 5080 to a two-slot card.
For both my 4K and 1440p testing, I’ve paired Nvidia’s RTX 5080 with AMD’s latest Ryzen 9 9800X3D processor and Asus’ 32-inch 4K OLED PG32UCDP monitor. I’ve put the RTX 5080 up against the RTX 5090 — Nvidia’s current flagship — as well as the RTX 4090, RTX 4080 and 4080 Super, AMD’s Radeon RX 7900 XTX, and the RTX 3080 Ti from 2021.
Without DLSS or ray tracing enabled, the results are largely consistent across both 4K and 1440p: the RTX 5080 is about 15 percent faster on average than the 4080 at 4K and 12 percent faster at 1440p. It’s 12 percent faster than the Radeon RX 7900 XTX at 4K and 11 percent at 1440p, and it beats the RTX 4080 Super by 11 and 10 percent, respectively.
CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 9800X3D
CPU cooler: Corsair H150i Elite LCD
Motherboard: Gigabyte Aorus Master
RAM: 32GB G.Skill DDR5-6000
Storage: Samsung 970 Evo Plus 2TB
PSU: Corsair HX1000W
Case: Streacom BC1 V2 open benchtable
That’s enough to make this the best $999 graphics card, but by historical standards, it’s disappointing. I really wanted to see the RTX 5080 beat the RTX 4090, but it lags the older card by about 18 percent. Maybe it was a big ask for a $999 GPU to beat a $1,599 last-gen flagship. The $1,199 RTX 4080 was faster than the $1,499 RTX 3090, but there was only a $300 gap there, not $600. Still, it’s the first time in a long time we’ve had such a paltry increase in an 80-series card.
Nvidia’s top GPU, the RTX 5090, is 50 percent faster than the RTX 5080 at 4K resolution, but it’s also double the price. That certainly leaves the door open for an RTX 5080 Ti, priced between the 5080 and 5090, that can beat the RTX 4090.
The RTX 5080 makes the most sense if you’re upgrading from the RTX 30 series or earlier. At 4K, without DLSS or ray tracing, it’s nearly 54 percent faster than the RTX 3080 Ti (56 percent at 1440p), and you’ll also be able to make full use of DLSS 4 and Multi Frame Gen if you upgrade.
DLSS 4 and Multi Frame Gen
Nvidia claimed the RTX 5080 would be twice as fast as the RTX 4080. For those kinds of numbers, you’ll need to turn to DLSS 4 and Multi Frame Gen.
Nvidia’s new Multi Frame Generation tech uses the latest AI graphics models, powered by an updated transformer architecture, to generate up to three additional frames per traditionally rendered frame, pushing the RTX 5080’s frame rates beyond what it’s normally capable of at 4K.
Cyberpunk 2077 is the only game with official support for DLSS 4 and Multi Frame Gen before the RTX 5080’s official launch on January 30th. In my testing, I’ve found big frame rate increases at 4K with full ray tracing enabled, with fewer graphical glitches than Nvidia’s previous frame-generation tech thanks to the new transformer model. Without DLSS 4, Cyberpunk runs at an unplayable 19fps average with ultra settings and full ray tracing. DLSS 4 Multi Frame Gen x4 brings that up to a far more playable 128fps, but it isn’t the same as a true 128fps.
DLSS Super Resolution — which renders the game at a lower resolution and then uses AI to upscale it — bumps the frame rate up to 38fps. Multi Frame Gen creates the three extra frames to get to that 128fps mark. While motion does look smoother, in terms of input latency, it still feels like a 38fps game. Multi Frame Gen is far less noticeable when the base frame rate with DLSS Super Resolution is higher than 60fps, so at 4K, you might need to lower the quality settings to really see the benefits.
It’s this Multi Frame Gen that lets Nvidia say the RTX 5080 is twice as fast as the RTX 4080, with the previous-gen card managing 62fps on average in Cyberpunk 2077 with full ray tracing and Frame Gen x2. The RTX 5080 more than doubles this with x4 enabled.
It’s a better story at 1440p thanks to higher base frame rates. Without DLSS 4, Cyberpunk 2077 averages 39fps at 1440p with full ray tracing and ultra settings. DLSS 4 Multi Frame Gen x4 brings that all the way up to 225fps. While it’s still not a true 225fps, it feels a lot better than the 4K equivalent because DLSS Super Resolution gets the base frame rate up to 73fps before Multi Frame Gen kicks in.
This is the ideal situation for Multi Frame Gen because you’re getting the motion clarity benefits and the game still feels more responsive. It’s obviously not as responsive as 225fps would be without Multi Frame Gen if you really dropped the settings, but in a game like Cyberpunk 2077, I think people are going to notice the motion clarity improvements more than the input latency.
When the RTX 5080 launches on January 30th, there’ll be a new DLSS override feature inside the Nvidia app that lets you force games to use its new Multi Frame Gen and transformer models. I haven’t been able to test this yet, since it’s not available, but if it works, it could be a great way to improve DLSS image quality and Frame Gen in games before developers can officially patch them.
I focus most of my GPU testing on gaming — because that’s what GeForce cards are designed for — but the RTX 5080 is also very capable of video editing or AI workloads. I found that the RTX 5080 was nearly 10 percent faster than the RTX 4080 in PugetBench’s DaVinci Resolve test, and in Procyon’s AI XL (FP16) test, it was nearly 28 percent faster.
The RTX 5080 isn’t powerful enough to beat the RTX 4090.
Nvidia recommends an 850-watt power supply for the RTX 5080, which is 100 watts more than for the RTX 4080 and 4080 Super. The RTX 5080’s total graphics power is 40 watts more than the RTX 4080; it maxes out at 360 watts instead of the massive 575-watt power draw of the RTX 5090.
I’m glad to see that the RTX 5080 doesn’t significantly increase the power draw over the previous generation. I only saw it hit 360W once, in the Metro Exodus extreme benchmark. Even in Cyberpunk 2077 running full path tracing and no DLSS, it only got up to 348 watts.
More impressively, on average, the RTX 5080 drew 278 watts of power across the nine games tested without DLSS or ray tracing. That’s slightly less than the 281-watt average I found on the RTX 4080 but 12 watts more than the RTX 4080 Super.
The RTX 5080 didn’t heat up excessively in my open bench testing. The highest temperature I recorded was in Metro Exodus, where it reached 71 degrees Celsius (160 degrees Fahrenheit). The RTX 4080 reached 68C in this same test, and the RTX 4080 Super hit a maximum of 63C.
The fans on the RTX 5080 push air out of the top.
DLSS 4 is really the star of the show so far with the RTX 50 series, but there still aren’t enough games to test it with. Multi Frame Gen has shown early promise, and it makes a lot more sense at 1440p in Cyberpunk 2077 on the RTX 5080 than it does at 4K. I’m waiting to test more games with DLSS 4 and Multi Frame Gen or even the ability to force these options on with the Nvidia app.
The RTX 5080 is the best $999 card on the market right now, beating AMD’s Radeon RX 9700 XTX by an average of 11 or 12 percent across the games I tested, without DLSS or ray tracing. It’s a significant upgrade over an RTX 30 series or earlier, with over 50 percent higher frame rates than the RTX 3080 Ti, plus access to the latest Multi Frame Generation technique. The 5080 offers about two-thirds the performance of the RTX 5090 for half the price and a little more than half the power draw.
But Nvidia hasn’t delivered the pure performance gains I was expecting. The RTX 5080 isn’t the cheaper RTX 4090 many were hoping for. I wanted to see a more meaningful bump to 4K performance than just 15 percent over the RTX 4080 without DLSS. I’m left wondering whether Nvidia will introduce an RTX 5080 Ti down the line and how close the upcoming $749 RTX 5070 Ti will get to the RTX 5080.
The highly anticipated Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 has finally arrived, but it seems that the hype may have been a bit premature. While many were expecting a significant leap in performance from the previous generation, the gains with the RTX 5080 are actually quite modest.
In terms of raw power, the RTX 5080 does offer a slight improvement over its predecessor, the RTX 4080. However, the increase in performance is not as drastic as some had hoped for. Gamers looking for a significant boost in frame rates and graphics quality may be left feeling underwhelmed by the modest gains of the RTX 5080.
That being said, the RTX 5080 still delivers a solid gaming experience, with impressive visuals and smooth gameplay. The ray tracing capabilities of the card are top-notch, providing stunning lighting effects and realistic reflections in supported games.
Overall, the Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 is a solid graphics card that offers a decent performance boost over its predecessor. While it may not be the huge leap forward that some were expecting, it still delivers a great gaming experience for those looking to upgrade their rig.