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NVIDIA has revealed the first details of their third generation of RTX GPUs with Ada Lovelace, plus DLSS 3 is coming with big improvements too.

Models announced so far includes:

  • RTX 4090 - $1,599 (£1,679) - 24GB GDDR6X - 450W - October 12th
  • RTX 4080 - $1,199 (£1,269) - 16gb GDDR6X - 320W or 12GB GDDR6X - 285W at $899 (£949) - (November sometime)

Click pictures to enlarge:

Some other features mentioned:

  • Streaming multiprocessors with up to 83 teraflops of shader power — 2x over the previous generation.
  • Third-generation RT Cores with up to 191 effective ray-tracing teraflops — 2.8x over the previous generation.
  • Fourth-generation Tensor Cores with up to 1.32 Tensor petaflops — 5x over the previous generation using FP8 acceleration.
  • Shader Execution Reordering (SER) that improves execution efficiency by rescheduling shading workloads on the fly to better utilize the GPU’s resources. As significant an innovation as out-of-order execution was for CPUs, SER improves ray-tracing performance up to 3x and in-game frame rates by up to 25%.
  • Ada Optical Flow Accelerator with 2x faster performance allows DLSS 3 to predict movement in a scene, enabling the neural network to boost frame rates while maintaining image quality.
  • Architectural improvements tightly coupled with custom TSMC 4N process technology results in an up to 2x leap in power efficiency.
  • Dual NVIDIA Encoders (NVENC) cut export times by up to half and feature AV1 support. The NVENC AV1 encode is being adopted by OBS, Blackmagic Design DaVinci Resolve, Discord and more.

During the event they showed off Cyberpunk 2077 and Microsoft Flight Simulator running with DLSS3 and the performance uplift did seem pretty impressive. Oh, and Portal RTX is a thing coming as a free DLC in November.

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"DLSS is one of our best inventions and has made real-time ray tracing possible. DLSS 3 is another quantum leap for gamers and creators," said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. "Our pioneering work in RTX neural rendering has opened a new universe of possibilities where AI plays a central role in the creation of virtual worlds."

DLSS3 will release with Ada Lovelace on October 12th and these games / engines will support it:

  • A Plague Tale: Requiem
  • Atomic Heart
  • Black Myth: Wukong
  • Bright Memory: Infinite
  • Chernobylite
  • Conqueror's Blade
  • Cyberpunk 2077
  • Dakar Rally
  • Deliver Us Mars
  • Destroy All Humans! 2 - Reprobed
  • Dying Light 2 Stay Human
  • F1® 22
  • F.I.S.T.: Forged In Shadow Torch
  • Frostbite Engine
  • HITMAN 3
  • Hogwarts Legacy
  • ICARUS
  • Jurassic World Evolution 2
  • Justice
  • Loopmancer
  • Warhammer 40,000: Darktide
  • Marauders
  • Microsoft Flight Simulator
  • Midnight Ghost Hunt
  • Mount & Blade II: Bannerlord
  • Naraka Bladepoint
  • NVIDIA Omniverse™
  • NVIDIA Racer RTX
  • PERISH
  • Portal With RTX
  • Ripout
  • S.T.A.L.K.E.R 2: Heart of Chornobyl
  • Scathe
  • Sword and Fairy 7
  • SYNCED
  • The Lord of the Rings: Gollum
  • The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt
  • THRONE AND LIBERTY
  • Tower of Fantasy
  • Unity
  • Unreal Engine 4 & 5

Oh, they also announced RTX Remix, a free modding platform built in their NVIDIA Omniverse that they say allows people to make RTX mods for various games that include "enhanced materials, full ray tracing, NVIDIA DLSS 3, and NVIDIA Reflex". It will support DirectX 8 and DirectX 9 games with fixed function graphics pipelines.

Those with a keen eye might spot a familiar bit of open source tech being used for it too:

DXVK for those who don't quite get it. The same translation tech used in Proton to get Windows games to run with Vulkan. So all mods made with it will run with Vulkan!

See the full video below:

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In other related NVIDIA GPU news, recently EVGA has broken off from NVIDIA and will no longer do their GPUs. In a brief announcement on their official forum they posted:

Hi all,

You may have heard some news regarding the next generation products from EVGA. Please see below for a message on future products and support:

 
  • EVGA will not carry the next generation graphics cards.
  • EVGA will continue to support the existing current generation products.
  • EVGA will continue to provide the current generation products.
EVGA is committed to our customers and will continue to offer sales and support on the current lineup. Also, EVGA would like to say thank you to our great community for the many years of support and enthusiasm for EVGA graphics cards.

EVGA Management
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mahagr Sep 20, 2022
Those RTX 40 series cards look interesting as well as nVidia using dxvk to improve older DX9 games. Let's hope those also benefit Linux users.

What comes to the prices, all of the announced cards are too expensive me to consider buying any of them. And that is even if I had the money -- I just cannot justify spending that much money for occasional gaming session even if I had more time to play games. And for kids.. NO WAY.

It also looks like that nVidia will not drop RTX 3060 prices at all, which likely means that the other models will not see much price reduction either. I guess that it is a good (but nonetheless disappointing) thing as I already happen to own RTX 30 cards.
randyl Sep 20, 2022
I wish US anti-trust regulators would dig into Nvidia because they're absolutely abusing their dominant market position to the detriment of consumers. That is the core trigger for the Sherman Act and other US antitrust law.

The base edition of this card is $200 more than the 3080FE (which MSRP'd at $699). This is absolutely bonkers.

I'm also waiting for RDNA3 and have hopes that something power efficient, which matters a lot to me, will be on the table from AMD. For now I'll stick with the 1660ti I have.
Koopacabras Sep 20, 2022
With energy prices sky rocketing it's not a sensible thing to do increasing power consumption like this imho. If AMD cards are not more power efficient I'll stick with my RDNA1 card, they are power efficient enough and sufficient for my gaming needs.
Lofty Sep 20, 2022
350 - 450TDP. Summer is going to be real fun when running this along side a 250w intel CPU and the all the accessories. Buying used isn't going to solve that a few years down the line, not to mention a used buyer is still going to need a high quality power supply, its not like you can bung one of these in a $50 case with a $50 PSU either without issues.

I just bought a cheap Mini PC for every day tasks to save on power. Given the current and probably 'new normal' electricity prices i considered it essential. To my surprise in everything other than gaming it works wonders. It's completely silent, running Standard Linux Mint 20.1 on MESA drivers. It plays all the way upto 4k 60FPS ! @ 15w on youtube. Which is no mean feat compared to my thirsty older desktop PC which can't even play 1080p 60 without dropping a few frames (due to lack of hardware acceleration) using 115w when only watching a YT or Twitch stream !

Seriously, invest in a cheap power meter of some kind and be amazed at how much a desktop is costing you doing practically nothing. Not to mention other household appliances. I have an old TV we practically use as a heater in winter because it is CCFL backlit and uses a ton of power and its only 32"!

I think when im just running a mini PC and a steam deck in winter im going to need an extra pair of socks while gaming.

That's a thought.. maybe you could use these new NVidia GPU's as a foot heater.. 🤔️
x_wing Sep 20, 2022
OMG this prices... lets hope that Intel can create a good GPU a kick them all with an aggressive pricing strategy.
Purple Library Guy Sep 20, 2022
Quoting: DrMcCoylol, 450W. I'm sorry, but this is utterly ridiculous.
I'm waiting for cards to reach the point where you start playing a game, the graphics card starts drawing power, and the breaker blows.
Mohandevir Sep 20, 2022
Quoting: Purple Library Guy
Quoting: DrMcCoylol, 450W. I'm sorry, but this is utterly ridiculous.
I'm waiting for cards to reach the point where you start playing a game, the graphics card starts drawing power, and the breaker blows.

Making me remember...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=inWKw8nqQlI

96 days... Lol!
denyasis Sep 20, 2022
I had to look..
In 2016, the MSRP of a 1080TI, was $499 (that was harder to find than I thought it would be, so I may be a bit off). In 2022, that would be about $615-$620.

I'm pretty sure my last build cost as much as a 4090... And I'm relatively sure it can still run anything released now or for the next few years, lol.

Side now, how would you cool that? I have enough trouble keeping my 1070Ti cool in my little itx case....
fireplace Sep 20, 2022
Cool, but what about proper Wayland support? Or free kernel modules that are actually usable on desktop?
Jahimself Sep 20, 2022
Low budget becoming the price of high end, couple of years ago.
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