Nvidia might never top the RTX 4090

Jacob Roach in a promotional image for ReSpec

ReSpec

This story is part of Jacob Roach’s ReSpec series, covering the world of PC gaming and hardware.

Updated less than 1 hour ago

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

A flagship like no other

Innovation is slowing

A shortcut

The RTX 4090 might be the best graphics card Nvidia has ever released, and we may never see a flagship quite on the same level ever again.

There’s no doubt the RTX 4090 is extremely powerful, but it’s not raw power alone that made it the flagship to end all flagships. I mean, the new RTX 5090 is already faster, and I’m confident Nvidia will continue to release massive GPUs that cost thousands of dollars in the future. But the RTX 4090 remains a crowning achievement for Team Green, and an inflection point for graphics cards more broadly.

A flagship like no other

Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

Nvidia has maintained some sort of halo GPU for several generations, mostly in a bid to claim performance dominance over AMD. Those cards originally fell under the Titan umbrella, but Nvidia changed course with its Ampere generation, releasing the first 90-class GPU ever in the form of the RTX 3090. It’s a Titan, but instead of being pushed into a corner for only enthusiasts with thousands of dollars to burn, it was part of the main range. The much more reasonably-priced RTX 3080 was considered the “flagship” of the generation, but by bringing a Titan-class option into the main product stack, Nvidia was readjusting expectations.

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One generation later, the RTX 4090 was suddenly the “flagship.” Of course, Nvidia made an RTX 4080, but it wasn’t the GPU on every PC gamer’s lips. The RTX 4090 was. In the course of one generation, Nvidia’s flagship offering went from $700 to $1,600, more than doubling the price. Nvidia had to justify a price that it had never pushed its GPUs to in the past.

And boy, did it justify the price increase. Unlike graphics cards traditionally of the Titan kin, the RTX 4090 actually provided a good value for the money. It was a better value than the RTX 3090, better than the RTX 3080, and even better than AMD’s RX 6950 XT. This was a flagship that didn’t accept the idea of diminishing returns. Even at $1,600, Nvidia was not only keeping pace with the price-to-performance ratio in the previous generation — it was exceeding it.

Digital Trends

It was something we had never seen before. Nvidia could claim dominance with cards like the RTX 3090 Ti, but you were forced to throw any ideas about value out the window. When the RTX 4090 was released, it was nearly 70% faster than the next fastest graphics card you could buy. That’s an impressive generational uplift anywhere, let alone on a flagship GPU.

Already, with the RTX 5090, we can see how much lower the generational uplift is. With Nvidia’s latest flagship, you’re looking at a boost of around 30%, which is a far cry from what Nvidia delivered with the RTX 4090. We’re only one generation on, but the RTX 4090 feels like an anomaly compared to both past and current generations, and based on the direction of PC hardware innovation, we may never see a flagship that can deliver on the same level.

Innovation is slowing

Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

Moore’s Law. It’s a concept that only Intel seems to be defending these days — it coined the term, after all — with Nvidia and now even AMD recognizing that it’s coming to an end. Delivering double the transistor density for half of the price every 18 months hasn’t been the reality of PC hardware for years, and now, the rate of innovation is so low that it’s becoming too much to ignore.

The concept of Moore’s Law has been a north star for the PC industry, and it’s served to get a disparate group of companies on board with a shared vision. Nvidia didn’t need to invest billions in the next era of semiconductor manufacturing; TSMC was already doing it. Like clockwork, transistors got smaller and smaller, allowing companies like Nvidia to squeeze more and more of them on a graphics card without taking up extra space.

Yes, even as recently as the RTX 4090, Nvidia was executing on the idea of Moore’s Law. There were 28.3 billion transistors on the RTX 3090, with a density of 45.1 million per square millimeter. For the RTX 4090, Nvidia packed in 76.3 billion, and at more than triple the density — 125.3 million per square millimeter. Compare that leap now to the RTX 5090. It has a bump in transistors up to 92.2 billion, but a lower density at 122.9 million per square millimeter.

It’s not a surprise, either, as Nvidia is using the same TSMC N4 node for its RTX 50-series GPUs as it did with its RTX 40-series GPUs. It’s the first time ever that Nvidia has used the same node across two different generations, and it’s a telling sign of the times. The brute-force method of squeezing more transistors on a chip just doesn’t work like it used to

Nvidia can’t deliver a generational uplift on the level of the RTX 4090 unless transistors get smaller, and that’s becoming increasingly difficult to accomplish. If we do ever see a flagship that can lead the pack like the RTX 4090 has, it won’t come from jumping down to a smaller node.

A shortcut

Nvidia

Don’t worry, we’re not just going to get the same graphics card over and over again. Nvidia is already establishing solutions to increase performance, and I’m sure there will be even more in the future. The idea of a “performance boost” just looks a little bit different than it used to.

It’s not surprising that Nvidia debuted DLSS 4 Multi-Frame Generation alongside RTX 50-series GPUs. Although Nvidia delivered a performance boost with the RTX 5090, that largely came as a function of a larger chip and more power compared to the RTX 4090. If you need evidence of that, just look at the RTX 5080. When scaling down to a more reasonable level of die size and power, Nvidia is only delivering a slight bump in performance, hoping to make up the deficit with AI-generated frames.

That’s the new idea of a performance boost. AI is the dynamic that breaks through the dead end of Moore’s Law, for better or worse. Instead of just rendering every pixel faster, we’ll render fewer pixels and make up the difference with AI. That happens through upscaling, through frame generation, and now even through multi-frame generation.

I know the idea of “fake” frames and upscaled images rubs some folks the wrong way, and I get it. When graphics cards cost thousands of dollars, you’d hope for more than just software improvements. But with innovations in process slowing to a crawl, those are the routes where performance improvements will come from. If you’re holding out hope for another RTX 4090-scale improvement in raw performance, you’re going to be disappointed.

There may be some massive leap forward in performance in the future, but it won’t look the same as what we saw with the RTX 4090. As much as I’m rooting for more powerful graphics cards for years to come — regardless of if they come from Nvidia or not — it’s important to reset expectations in the meantime.

Editors’ Recommendations

  • The RTX 5080 might prove its worth on upcoming gaming laptops

  • Nvidia might break with tradition for the RTX 5060

  • Nvidia’s RTX 5090 isn’t melting power cables, but it sure looks that way

  • AMD missed its shot for the top

  • Nvidia RTX 5090 ‘lottery’ reportedly ends in screams and chaos




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