NVIDIA's new mysterious RTX Blackwell GPU spotted: features bonkers 96GB of GDDR7 memory on a 512-bit memory bus, new workstation GPU expected.
DLSS 4 is arguably the biggest selling point of the new RTX 50-series, but any Nvidia RTX GPU can benefit. Here's how.
Nvidia's CUDA 12.8 release notes indicate that support for the older architectures is now considered "feature-complete" and will be frozen in an upcoming release.
Here are the RTX 5090 benchmarks, as we test DLSS 4 and Multi Frame Gen on the new graphics card in Cyberpunk 2077, Black Ops 6, and more.
Not only does the VRAM jump up from 24GB to 32GB in the RTX 5090, but it gets a lot faster too with GDDR7 memory. You’re getting both more of it and a faster speed at 32 Gbps.
Bell says that the prototype triple-fan cooling system influenced Nvidia’s Blackwell architecture. However, the latest RTX 5090 Founders Edition card that we are currently testi
Nvidia hasn't announced the RTX 5060 yet, but I'm already worried about how the card will perform when it shows up.
Leaked benchmarks show some eye-opening synthetic gains, but real-world gaming is more like a 20% uplift on average compared to NVIDIA's RTX 4090.
Nvidia's newest flagship card is clearly even ... it's the gamer's dream GPU. So what do we know about Team Green's upcoming BFGPU 3.0? I'm pulling all the latest news right here in one place ...
Nvidia is launching the first volley of RTX 50-series GPUs based on its new Blackwell architecture, starting with the RTX 5090 and working downward from there. The company also appears to be winding down support for a few of its older GPU architectures, according to these CUDA release notes spotted by Tom's Hardware.
The most powerful of Nvidia's newest Blackwell graphics cards is a " beast ." Review after review has brought up benchmarks showcasing that when it comes to gaming, the RTX 5090 blows its predecessors and other graphics cards away. However, it appears that for many consumers, the RTX 5090 is overkill.