Skip to main content

Nvidia’s $1,500 RTX 3090 graphics card can play games in 8K at 60 FPS

Nvidia has officially unveiled a new line of highly anticipated graphics cards, led by the $1,500 RTX 3090. The company also announced two more mainstream cards, the RTX 3080 and RTX 3070.

Recommended Videos

The announcements came from Nvidia’s livestreamed GeForce event, led by founder and CEO Jensen Huang, who characterized the move to RTX 3000 as the biggest generational leap in Nvidia’s history.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Jensen said the flagship RTX 3080 offers “twice the performance of the 2080,” and includes 10GB of GDDR6X memory running at 19Gbps. The result is consistent 60 FPS (frames per second) at 4K with RTX turned on. Of course, that will vary greatly between games. The RTX 3080’s new design includes reengineered thermal solution, providing two times better cooling, according to Nvidia. The RTX 3080 Founders Edition will cost $699, the same starting price as the RTX 2080, and will be available on September 17.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

Jensen also mentioned that the RTX 3080 and RTX 3070 are both faster than the RTX 2080 Ti, which is currently the fastest consumer graphics card you can buy. In addition, the RTX 3070 is reportedly 1.6 times faster than the RTX 2070. The RTX 3070 comes with 8GB of memory and will cost $499.

The RTX 3070 wasn’t given a specific release date, but it will be available some time in October.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Meanwhile, the RTX 3090 is what Nvidia calls a “BFGPU,” a massive $1,499 graphics card with 24GB of GDDR6X memory at 19.5Gbps. Jensen proudly boasted that the RTX 3090 can play games at 8K in 60 FPS. This isn’t rendered natively, of course, but instead uses Nvidia’s supersampling A.I. technology, known as DLSS 2.0.

The RTX 3090 will also support HDMI 2.1, which can provide variable refresh rate to the new crop of OLED TVs that also support the powerful port standard.

This is a follow-up to the Titan RTX, a limited-release card that was primarily made for workstations and data scientists. We’ve already seen some manufacturers, such as Acer, announce gaming desktops with the RTX 3090.

The RTX 3090 was rumored to require new 12-pin power connector, but that turned out not to be true. The RTX 3090 and 3080 both use two 8-pin power connectors, while the RTX 2070 uses a single eight-pin connector.

The RTX 3090 is set to start shipping on September 24.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

These new graphics cards mark the debut of Nvidia’s new Ampere microarchitecture, which is said to provide a 50% uplift in GPU performance while consuming half the power. All of these cards use second-generation RT cores, third-generation Tensor cores, and 28 billion transistors. Ampere is based on Samsung’s 8nm process.

The RTX 3000 series is a follow-up to the 2000-series GPUs, which first launched in 2018 with support for real-time ray tracing. In 2019, Nvidia has also pushed out an iterative update with the RTX Super series for both mobile and desktop form factors.

Luke Larsen
Luke Larsen is the Senior Editor of Computing, managing all content covering laptops, monitors, PC hardware, Macs, and more.
Nvidia is reportedly sunsetting the RTX 4090
The RTX 4090 sitting alongside the Fractal Terra case.

The RTX 4090 is undoubtedly the best graphics card you can buy right now from a performance standpoint, but Nvidia is reportedly discontinuing the flagship GPU. Reports from the Board Channel forums (shared by Wccftech) suggest Nvidia is preparing to end production of the RTX 4090 and the China-exclusive RTX 4090D starting next month in order to make way for next-gen RTX 50-series graphics cards.

It's not surprising that Nvidia would wind down production of the RTX 4090 as the next generation of graphics cards approaches. Flagship GPUs like the RTX 4090 don't have much of a shelf life after a new generation has released, which is something we saw in action with the RTX 3090. Although Nvidia could end production of the GPU in October (the company itself hasn't, and likely won't, confirm that detail publicly), the card won't immediately disappear from store shelves.

Read more
Wait, what? Nvidia’s RTX 50-series might be ready to go this month
RTX 4090.

Update: According to MEGAsizeGPU on X (formerly Twitter), the following might be a mistranslation. The source reportedly talks about Nvidia finalizing the design for Blackwell in September instead of launching the card. No details about the release date have been confirmed. The original article follows below.

Nvidia's RTX 50-series graphics cards are coming -- we know that for a fact. But when? The release dates of these graphics cards have been the topic of much speculation. Early leakers predicted that they'd launch in late 2024, but the general consensus slowly shifted toward an early 2025 release instead.

Read more
Nvidia’s most popular graphics card just bit the dust
The RTX 3060 installed in a computer.

Nvidia is reportedly discontinuing the RTX 3060, which is easily one of the best graphics cards Nvidia has released in the past few years. The GPU is now over three years old, and Nvidia has apparently sent a notice to its board partners that the next order for these cards will be the last the company sends out.

The notice was posted on Board Channels, which is a forum where board partners discuss the internal movements of companies like Nvidia and AMD. Although Nvidia hasn't confirmed that the RTX 3060 is being discontinued, it would make sense. The card was originally released in February 2021, and sales have likely declined in the face of newer cards like Nvidia's own RTX 4060 and competitors like the Intel Arc A750.

Read more