NVIDIA is and continues to be the gold standard for graphics cards, and AMD’s Radeon cards could just never quite stack up. The bad news doesn’t end there; Intel’s recent launch of their B580 GPU makes matters much worse.
On price alone, AMD has a leg up on Nvidia. AMD offers more affordable graphics card options, focusing on the budget and midrange options. AMD's flagship GPUs, the AMD Radeon RX 70 series, start as low as $269.99, with the upper range peaking at $999.
The new Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 looks very expensive and very good. But the RTX 5070 Ti is what really caught my eye.
We now know more details about Nvidia's upcoming GeForce RTX 5090, RTX 5080, RTX 5070 Ti, and RTX 5070 graphics cards. Here's some broader specs info on every new RTX 5000 GPU.
I'm not any more happy about a $2,000 graphics card, but there's no denying that Nvidia stomped AMD and Intel at CES 2025.
Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) is a leading supplier of networking hardware and chips for gaming, computing, robotics, and especially data centers, which is where most artificial intelligence (AI) development takes place.
Project DIGITS is meant to work alongside a desktop PC, giving AI developers, data scientists, and students a convenient way to access a Blackwell GPU. But the product won't be cheap.
Explore the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090: unmatched power, advanced cooling, and next-gen connectivity for gamers and professionals alike.
If you invested $10,000 into Nvidia a decade ago, that would be worth nearly $3 million now. That's an unbelievable run, and anyone who invested in Nvidia and held shares over the past decade couldn't be happier. But what if you invested two decades ago, in 2005? That same $10,000 would be worth $7.6 million.