Nvidia announces RTX 50-series graphics cards with DLSS 4 multi frame generation


Nvidia announces RTX 50-series graphics cards with DLSS 4 multi frame generation


 As was predicted, Nvidia has uncovered its new RTX 50-series work area designs cards at its CES 2025 featured discussion, which occurred in the early hours UK time. The ongoing setup incorporates four cards: a $1999/£1939 RTX 5090, a $999/£979 RTX 5080, a $749/£729 RTX 5070 Ti and a $549/£539 RTX 5070. 


Each "Blackwell" illustrations card comes furnished with GDDR7 memory, some amazing casing rate claims and DLSS 4 multi outline age. The two top-end cards are showing up on 30th January, while the upper-mid-range contributions are planned for February.

The "relative performance" claims for some of these graphics cards are wild, so let's start with an idea of expected frame-rates for each card and a quick explainer of DLSS 4 multi frame generation before we cover off the architectural improvements.

The $1999 RTX 5090 is unsurprisingly positioned as the ultimate graphics card, a prosumer model with 32GB of GDDR7. It's based around the GB202 GPU with 92 billion transistors, versus 76 billion on the 4090, and includes 21760 CUDA cores.

senator-deb-fischers-husband-refuses-to

 Nvidia's slides promise double the frame-rates of the RTX 4090, or a comfortable 4K 240Hz with full RT and maxed settings in games that support the multi frame generation (MFG) feature.

To make sense of before we go further, MFG includes up to three created outlines for each customarily delivered outline. This outcomes in higher casing rates and hence visual ease, however not really better execution as we'd ordinarily name it, as idleness is dependent on the "base" outline rate as opposed to the last "yield" outline rate. 

The idea is like the first casing age (FG) include on RTX 40-series cards, and as such depends on designer joining and Nvidia's Reflex 2 idleness relief tech to function admirably.


Next Post Previous Post

S