The graphics card (GPU) is the single most important component of every gaming PC. A quality graphics card will run your favorite games fluidly at the resolution of your choice without forcing you to drop quality settings all the way down.
The current GPU market is quite healthy and has several great options. The decision between getting an NVIDIA or AMD GPU boils down to how much you value ray tracing performance and whether you plan to use upscaling to improve performance.
If we disregard ray tracing, AMD graphics cards do a good job of matching NVIDIA offerings at slightly lower price points. For example, the $550 AMD Radeon RX 7900 GRE is just ahead of the $600 NVIDIA RTX 4070 Super, and the $500 AMD RX 7800 XT is about 10% slower than both. Then we have the $260 AMD RX 7600 that perfectly matches the rasterization performance—gaming performance without ray tracing effects—of the $300 NVIDIA RTX 4060. Basically, if we’re only looking at rasterization performance, AMD cards offer slightly better performance per dollar than their NVIDIA counterparts.
However, this is only half of the story. If we include ray tracing and DLSS, NVIDIA GPUs are usually a better deal than their AMD counterparts. That said, FSR 3 can match the visual quality of DLSS 3 at 4K; at 1440p DLSS looks better in most scenarios, while at 1080p, DLSS is a clear winner. Then we have DLSS 3 frame generation, which is a noticeably better option than FSR 3. In other words, if you plan on using upscaling to get as high performance in
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