digitalwanderer
Legend
Do you need a 5000 series to use it?When is the new DLSS version coming out? I wanna try it.
Do you need a 5000 series to use it?When is the new DLSS version coming out? I wanna try it.
you only need a 50 series for multi frame generation. transformer super resolution, ray reconstruction, and dlaa works on all rtx cardsDo you need a 5000 series to use it?
My understanding is that @ILikeFeet is correct. Only MFA and maybe neural materials are locked to Blackwell. Not sure about neural materials.Do you need a 5000 series to use it?
What res monitor you got? I've found it to be way, way more effective at 1440p than on my old 1080p monitor. But even on the 1080p monitor DLAA (native) looked good.I have a confession :
I have a 4070ti super (no that's not the confession, wait for it)
never used dlss
Yea you'd benefit hugely from DLSS, even Quality mode. Though I don't know what the pixel density is like on a huge superwide monitor like that. Seems it's more useful with higher pixel densities.3840x1200
There's zero life necessity for a halo video card; in fact there's zero life necessity for ANY video card. If prices get too high, people will stop buying them. And do you know what you call a company who makes things too expensive and literally nobody buys their stuff? You call them bankrupt.Are they given a choice apart from own one or dont.... people are blaming the consumer for the price,
And "RTX Hair" since that requires new geometry primitive which only Blackwell RT cores support.Only MFA and maybe neural materials are locked to Blackwell. Not sure about neural materials.
GTX1080TI used a cut down GP102 with 471mm^2. The 5070 TI for $749 has a cut down GB203 with ~410mm^2. There is not so much difference, especially that nVidia can deliver higher bandwidth with a 256bit memory interface.Yes, I too would like a 5090 to be the same price as a 1080 Ti was eight years ago. What's cool is, 12 billion transistors and 11GB of RAM (the constituent components of a 1080 Ti) are notably cheaper now; I suspect the RTX 5070 is likely to be at least 50% more transistors than the 1080Ti, with another gigabyte of radically faster RAM, running on less power, and costing $150 less (a 22% discount) to boot! Whether you like it or not, whether you realize it or not, you're getting your savings. It just turns out the high end is insanely higher than it ever was, and those sorts of things mean customers are willing to pay more to achieve it.
NVIDIA has had a fascination with hair for a long time. It's a long standing problem in games, but they're overthinking it. This could easily be solved by making all the characters bald. RTX Bald could run on anything.And "RTX Hair" since that requires new geometry primitive which only Blackwell RT cores support.
It is a bit different this time though, and I don't get why they even call it "RTX Hair" at all as it's just a new acceleration primitive for ray tracing. One would think that games may have other geometry suitable to be represented by spheres aside from hair and calling it this way kinda diminish what the feature actually is and capable of.NVIDIA has had a fascination with hair for a long time. It's a long standing problem in games, but they're overthinking it
Yet I didn't even mention the 5070 Ti, did I?GTX1080TI used a cut down GP102 with 471mm^2. The 5070 TI for $749 has a cut down GB203 with ~410mm^2. There is not so much difference, especially that nVidia can deliver higher bandwidth with a 256bit memory interface.
Hehe, you know, I wasn't even gonna go there, but since you mentioned it... https://www.usinflationcalculator.com/ says the inflation-adjusted price for a $699 video card in 2017 comes out to near-exactly $899 today. I'm assuming US dollars because, in most ways, the US came out better than most in the big global inflation situation we've had over the past few years. As such, this is a very conservative estimate compared to what our friends and colleagues outside the US have to deal with.Now compare it to the inflation adjusted price of the 1080 Ti in 2025 dollars…
The argument was somehow cost is going up without checks or balances. As it turns out, costs are going down in comparable hardware, however the absolute ceiling on performance is an order of magnitude higher now. I also chose the 1080 Ti purposefully as it is continually regarded as the last of the "best performance per dollar" cards, yet somehow it underperforms and is overpriced by modern equipment. Once again proving costs have continued to reduce in both absolute and relative terms, yet the halo series still costs more not because it's necessary, but because people are willing and able to pay for it.I fail to see what is the point of comparing the 1080ti from 2017 to the 5070 again? 5070 would be even more awesome if it is compared to a GTX 280...
But did we though? There's another conversation somewhere on this forum about how high AA and high resolution and high framerates really never happened in the top AAA titles because there still wasn't enough horsepower then, either. It always ends up being a circular argument (as you well know and alluded to in your reply) because one person will have a story about how this one game could be maxxed out and they remember it fully and blah blah, but then another person remembers this other game couldn't be maxxed out... But then we devolve into whether "max" graphical options mean anything, and then who would even notice, inevitably by the same people with strong opinions on how "fake frames" have no place in high quality graphics output.They’re a lot more expensive if your criteria is “I used to max out games for $600” or “The best card used to cost $700” whether or not those things are actually true or relevant.
I understand and personally I'm at peace with these companies pricing their products, but Imo it's a fact that nVidia has become much more "efficient" in pricing their lineup and consumers has been on the losing side of this tug of war. GTX 570 was 94% of the biggest die enabled, 5070 is something else. 1080Ti in 2017 was also an epic performance monster and nobody was worrying about it having enough memory for games. Back then nVidia left money on the table, these days they are a bit better at not doing it. But yeah the 5000 looks reasonable to me, I just want to see those 3GB modules.The argument was somehow cost is going up without checks or balances. As it turns out, costs are going down in comparable hardware, however the absolute ceiling on performance is an order of magnitude higher now. I also chose the 1080 Ti purposefully as it is continually regarded as the last of the "best performance per dollar" cards, yet somehow it underperforms and is overpriced by modern equipment. Once again proving costs have continued to reduce in both absolute and relative terms, yet the halo series still costs more not because it's necessary, but because people are willing and able to pay for it.
It really shouldn't be surprising to anyone, but somehow people still miss it.