Best Nvidia Graphics Cards 2025

Whether you’ve been playing PC games for years or you’re building your first gaming PC, picking the right graphics card is probably one of the most consequential choices. It doesn’t help that now there’s three companies making graphics cards, which means there are more options out there than ever before.

But there are a lot of reasons to pick an Nvidia graphics card over one made by AMD or Intel. For one, whether you love it or hate it, Nvidia has plenty of software and features that are exclusive to its graphics cards, whereas things like FSR (FidelityFX Super Resolution) from AMD will work no matter what GPU is in your system. Features like DLSS, or Deep Learning Super Sampling, make an Nvidia graphics card an attractive choice – at least until the AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT comes out with FSR 4, AMD’s AI upscaler.

Nvidia also has the most powerful graphics cards on the market right now, especially at the high-end. There simply is not another graphics card that can match the RTX 5090 in pure performance. But even when it comes to more affordable graphics cards like the RTX 4060 Ti, the AI upscaling offered by DLSS can really help stretch the performance, and can even push into higher resolutions than you would otherwise be able to.

It’s still important to figure out what resolution you want to play games at, because that’s going to change what type of graphics card you want to go for. If you want to play all the newest PC games at 4K with all the settings maxed, you’re going to need a much more powerful card than someone that just wants to play World of Warcraft at 1080p.

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Graphics Cards Basics

While graphics cards are extremely complicated devices, shopping for one doesn’t need to be that much of a hassle. As long as you keep an eye out for some simple specs, you should have a pretty good idea of what you’re getting into.

The most obvious thing to look for is whether or not your graphics card is actually part of the current generation. You don’t want to miss out on performance or features, especially if you’re spending hundreds of dollars on just one part of your computer. With Nvidia graphics cards, this is actually extremely easy, just look at the two numbers following the ‘RTX’ or ‘GTX’ in the graphics card’s name. Nvidia just launched its newest generation of graphics cards, which are labeled with ’50.’ If it’s ‘40,’ that’s the previous generation from 2022; ‘30’ and ‘20’ are the two generations before that.

Don’t get me wrong, getting a 30-series or 20-series card will still provide an excellent gaming experience, with the RTX 3080 still able to power most games at 4K without breaking a sweat.

But what about the second two numbers? Well, take a look at the RTX 5090, the top-end graphics card on the market. Then, take a look at the RTX 4050, which is only a laptop GPU, but is way weaker. The scale typically goes from 50-90, with the higher number meaning a more powerful graphics card. Nvidia does sometimes add extra letters or words at the end of its graphics cards, with ‘Ti’ and ‘Super’ being common variants. This typically means a slightly more powerful card. For instance, the Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070 Ti is going to be slightly more powerful than the RTX 5070. The basic rule of thumb is that, after the number, any extra letters or words typically indicate a faster graphics card.

When it comes to specs, graphics cards have a lot of numbers and lingo to swallow, which can definitely be overwhelming. But if you just want to slot a GPU in your rig and forget about it, you don’t need to pay attention to every little detail.

The amount of VRAM you need is going to largely depend on what resolution you want to play your games at. If you want to play games at 4K, you’re going to want as much video memory as you can afford. There are games that will eat up upwards of 20GB of VRAM at that resolution if you let them, so the sky really is the limit. For lower resolutions like 1080p, however, you can get by with 8GB of RAM, though I would recommend going with a 12GB or 16GB card if it’s in your budget. An 8GB card will get you through most games, but there is a growing number of AAA PC games that need more memory.

There are some other specs you can look at if you really want to, like clock speed, CUDA core count and Streaming Multiprocessors – what Nvidia calls its compute units – but those largely just get better as you get a more high-end graphics card either way. Compute Units are essentially the same as CPU cores on a processor, and each one contains 128 CUDA cores. So, the RTX 5080 with its 84 Compute Units, contains a total of 10,752 CUDA cores. Just keep in mind that directly comparing two graphics cards of different generations by the core counts alone won’t tell you how much of a performance jump it’ll be.

Once you’ve picked the graphics card you want, you need to make sure you have a power supply that can handle it. You can usually check the box your graphics card comes in to get an idea of how much power the card requires, and if not, Nvidia has it listed out on its website. My advice would be to check the required power for your graphics cards and then get a power supply that can provide just a bit more wattage. For instance, if your graphics card recommends a 450W power supply, I’d get a 550 or a 650W unit just to be on the safe side.

1. If You Just Want the Best: RTX 5090

If you just want the best

Gigabyte Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090

The Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 is now the most powerful graphics card on the market, even if it claims that title with a bit less force than in previous generations.

CUDA Cores/Stream Processors

21,760

Memory Bandwidth

1.79 TB/s

Power Connectors

1 x 16-pin

Outputs

1 x HDMI 2.1b, 3 x Display Port 1.4b

Size

12 x 5.4 x 1.9 inches (L x W x H) (Dual-Slot)

The most powerful consumer GPU out there, period.

Multi-Frame Generation is cool if you have a 4K 240Hz monitor

Not much more powerful than the last-gen RTX 4090

The Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 is the most powerful graphics card on the market right now, there’s no way around that. But I still wouldn’t recommend most people buy it. This is a $1,999 graphics card to start and it’s not exactly super available on store shelves right now. We’ve even started seeing scalpers selling this thing for $9000 on eBay, just a day after launch. If you do have the funds to get your hands on it, though, you can expect the best 4K gaming experience money can buy, even if it isn’t light-years ahead of the RTX 4090.

When I reviewed the Nvidia RTX 5090, I found that it’s around 20-25% faster than the RTX 4090 at 4K, with the performance lead obviously waning at lower resolutions. That’s a relatively small gen-on-gen performance uplift, but at the end of the day, faster is faster. The RTX 5090 largely gets its larger performance from an absolutely massive GPU, with 21,760 CUDA cores, which can boost up to 2.41GHz. That’s a sizable jump from the RTX 4090, and it’s possible primarily through a much larger power budget. This graphics card requires 575W of power to run, which is the most power a consumer graphics card has ever required – including back in the days of dual-GPU graphics cards like the AMD Radeon R9 295X2.

As such, you’re going to need a serious power supply to keep this GPU fed with power. Nvidia recommends at least a 1,000W unit to pair with the RTX 5090, but I’d recommend going a little beyond that, with something like a 1,200W PSU, just to make sure it stays efficient when you’re really pushing it to its limits. Because this graphics card will hit that power limit, especially when DLSS 4 Multi-Frame Generation is enabled, and that’s largely the reason to get this graphics card.

Essentially, DLSS 4 Multi-Frame Generation, or MFG, uses the AI Tensor Cores to generate up to 3 AI frames off of each rendered frame. This can hugely improve your framerate, but can introduce serious latency if you’re not already getting a solid frame rate. This is a feature you should only really enable if you’re already getting 60-70 fps, but it’s going to be rare to find a PC game that the 5090 is going to have any trouble hitting that frame rate on.