Video Cards & GPUs News - Page 1
GeForce RTX 4090 more popular than every single Radeon GPU
Regarding desktop GPUs for PC gaming, NVIDIA is dominating - a recent report by Jon Peddie Research (JPR) showed that 88% of AIB GPU shipments for Q1 2024 were GeForce RTX cards. Looking at the latest Steam Hardware & Software Survey results for May 2024, it's a similar picture: 76.18% of PC gamers across desktop rigs and laptops are playing with GeForce RTX cards.
Drilling down into the data and looking at the most popular GPUs, the picture becomes even worse for AMD and Intel. With 15.96% of the Steam GPU share, AMD's second-place position is bolstered by integrated Radeon graphics in mobile chips and gaming handhelds like Valve's Steam Deck. According to the latest data, the most popular discrete desktop gaming GPU is the Radeon RX 580, a GeForce GTX 1060 competitor from 2017.
With a 7.62% market share, all Intel entries in the list cover the company's integrated and aging Xe, UHD, and HD graphics technologies - there's no Arc mentioned anywhere. And when it comes to modern graphics cards, NVIDIA's latest GeForce RTX 40 Series is on its own.
Continue reading: GeForce RTX 4090 more popular than every single Radeon GPU (full post)
GeForce Experience updated for the first time in months, includes 122 new Optimal Settings
Since it launched into Beta earlier his year, I switched to the new NVIDIA App for my main gaming rig and laptop, as the new interface and overlay are fast and feature-packed. At Computex 2024 the Control Panel and GeForce Experience replacement also got a meaty update in the form of 120 FPS ShadowPlay AV1 recording and one-click overclocking for GeForce RTX GPUs.
So yeah, there's no real reason to stick with the aging GeForce Experience app for GeForce RTX owners. However, seeing as the NVIDIA App is still opt-in and in Beta, Experience is still the official way to access GeForce RTX features like ShadowPlay game recording, performance monitoring tools, and optimized game settings. However, NVIDIA has almost forgotten that the GeForce Experience existed.
The new GeForce Experience 3.28 update is the app's first since November 2023. It brings a massive 122 'optimal game settings' for titles like Call of Duty: Modern Warfare III, Diablo IV, Alan Wake 2, Starfield, HELLDIVERS 2, Horizon Forbidden West, and many more.
World's smallest GeForce RTX 4070 launches in China and sells out immediately
China's Zephyr has released the world's first ITX-ready GeForce RTX 4070, a dual-slot version of the card that is only 172mm long and arrives with a single fan. Dual-slot GeForce RTX 4070 cards aren't uncommon thanks to the Ada generation's excellent power efficiency, but the Zephyr GeForce RTX 4070 ITX Sakura Blizzard graphics card is the smallest we've seen.
Granted, the card's look isn't exactly minimal - it features a white shroud with holographic patterns, a pink PC, and a pink fan. The dimensions are impressive: 172 x 123 x 42mm - the world's smallest GeForce RTX 4070 GPU - powered by the same single 8-pin power connector. Under the hood, you also have the same AD104-250 GPU and 12GB GDDR6X memory, but with stock settings and no out-of-the-box OC.
As spotted by VideoCardz, this tiny GeForce RTX 4070 sold out on its first day of sale. Zephyr noted that a restock will be available in mid-July.
Intel Arc Graphics driver update answers the age-old question, 'Can it play Crysis?'
Intel Arc graphics driver 31.0.101.5590 WHQL for discrete GPUs and Intel Core Ultra rigs with integrated Arc graphics is here - adding support for a pair of new titles, Destiny 2: The Final Shape and the highly anticipated Elden Ring Shadow of the Erdtree expansion.
As per the headline, there's some added goodness for legacy titles, including Crysis (2007) and Crysis 2 (2011). The latest Intel Game On driver release boosts the original Crysis performance at 1080p with Very High settings by up to 10% on a discrete Arc GPU. Crysis 2 also gets up to a 6% increase in 1080p performance - this time on a Core Ultra chip with Arc graphics.
With that, the answer to the question of whether Intel Arc GPUs can run Crysis is now "better than before."
ASUS's new PRIME GeForce RTX 40 Series GPUs are SFF Ready for compact builds
Compact builds are becoming increasingly popular each year. Small form factor (SFF) cases can lead to a smaller desk footprint or a rig that can sit snugly underneath a TV. The big concern, at least when trying to assemble an SFF build that is powerful enough to play the latest PC games, is whether or not the hardware will fit.
Noticing the trend, NVIDIA announced, as part of its Computex 2024 announcements, a new 'SFF Ready' label that denotes which GeForce RTX 4070 through to GeForce RTX 4080 SUPER GPUs can fit in smaller SFF cases. It all boils down to GPUs and SFF cases meeting specific dimension criteria (NVIDIA told us that pretty much all GeForce RTX 4060s are SFF Ready), and you can see all of the GeForce RTX cards (and compatible cases) here.
With that, ASUS is introducing a new line of budget-friendly GeForce RTX GPUs that are SFF Ready and called ASUS Prime. So far, the company has announced three models: the Prime GeForce RTX 4070 SUPER, Prime GeForce RTX 4070, and Prime GeForce RTX 4060 Ti.
AMD's next-gen RDNA 5 could feature unique 'multi-chiplet' GPU, with three dedicated dies
AMD has teased a future-gen GPU architecture that would use a "multi-chipset" GPU design in a new patent filing... this is NOT RDNA 4... rather, this would be RDNA 5 or further out in AMD's Radeon GPU roadmap.
The company is very experienced in multi-chiplet designs, with AMD's Instict MI200 AI accelerators being the first to feature an MCM (multi-chip module) design, using multiple chiplets stacked onto a single package. This includes the GPCs (Graphics Processing Cores), HBM memory stacks, and the I/O die.
The newly-spotted patent describes the use of three different "modes" of chiplet utilization, with the differences being in how the resources are allocated and then managed ahead. The patent shows three different modes: the first is the "single GPU" mode, similar to how graphics cards with GPUs function now, all of the on-board chiplets would act as a single, unified processing unit, with resources shared in a collaborate environment.
XFX has a new idea for AMD RX 7000 GPUs: swappable fans, but some gamers are asking - why?
XFX has 'something cool' coming, or more specifically something coming for the cooling solutions on its higher-end AMD Radeon RX 7000 graphics cards - namely replaceable fans.
VideoCardz spotted XFX publicizing this move on X, noting that the graphics card manufacturer has already made swappable fans a reality over in China with its Phoenix Nirvana products (a few weeks back, so not long ago).
It looks like the same idea will be coming to the US (and we'd imagine other regions as well), and if XFX follows in the footsteps of what it did in the Chinese GPU market, we will see RX 7900 XTX, RX 7900 GRE and RX 7800 XT graphics cards that have these swappable fans.
ASRock updates budget Radeon RX 6500 XT, doubles VRAM to 8GB
AMD's Radeon RX 6500 XT is an entry-level budget option for those looking to get into PC gaming without breaking the bank. The card and model are a few years old now, and with reference specs of 4GB of GDDR6 memory at 18 Gb/s on a 64-bit interface, it's not exactly something we could recommend in 2024.
That is, until now. Sort of. ASRock has launched a brand-new Radeon RX 6500 XT variant with the ASRock Radeon RX 6500 XT Phantom Gaming 8GB OC (RX6500XT PG 8GO). As the name suggests, this variant increases the VRAM capacity to 8GB, making it far more useful for playing modern titles at 1080p with low to medium settings.
Outside of the memory, you've got the same Navi 24 GPU, albeit with a boost to the out-of-the-box Boost Clock to 2825 MHz. Double the memory and an overclocked GPU? It sounds great for a GPU that retails for $169.99 USD (which is substantially lower in price than the entry-level GeForce RTX 3050 from the same generation). However, there is a catch.
Continue reading: ASRock updates budget Radeon RX 6500 XT, doubles VRAM to 8GB (full post)
Get two free games when you buy an AMD Radeon RX 7800 XT or 7700 XT GPU
AMD is running a new promotion for those who pick up a new MD Radeon RX 7800 XT or Radeon RX 7700 XT graphics card before August 17, 2024. The 'Why We Game' promo offers new Radeon GPU owners their pick of two games from a solid list of blockbuster titles: Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora, Starfield, Lies of P, and Company of Heroes 3.
AMD notable a promotion last year for the launch of Starfield, so being able to pick up two complimentary games with an eligible GPU purchase does add value to both the Radeon RX 7800 XT and Radeon RX 7700 XT - to the tune of around $100 USD when you factor in the cost of two games.
The promotion kicked off this week, so if you've been on the fence about what mid-range GPU to buy for 1440p gaming, this could make that decision much easier. Several models for both Radeon GPUs are sold at or slightly below MSRP. The Radeon RX 7700 XT probably presents the best value, as it can be picked up for under $400 USD.
NVIDIA's next-gen RTX 5090 rumors: GDDR7 on 512-bit bus, RTX 5080 will have 256-bit bus
NVIDIA's next-generation flagship GeForce RTX 5090 has some new leaked specs, with the GB202 GPU configuration being leaked onto X by kopite7kimi:
GB202 is going to be an absolute freaking beast, offering 33% more CUDA cores than the AD102 GPU inside of the GeForce RTX 4090, with GB202 rumored to pack in an incredible 24,576 CUDA cores. AD102 has just 18,423 CUDA cores in comparison. GB202 will power the new ultra-enthusiast flagship GeForce RTX 5090 graphics card, which is rumored to have a monster 512-bit memory bus with ultra-fast, next-generation GDDR7 memory.