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NVIDIANVIDIARENDER
United States · Founded 1993

NVIDIA

NVIDIA dominates the discrete GPU market, with DLSS (deep-learning supersampling) and dedicated ray-tracing cores as its main differentiators. The GeForce RTX 5090, our highest-scoring GPU of 2026, ships with 21,760 CUDA cores and 32 GB of GDDR7.

HQ Santa Clara, California

All NVIDIA products on vsMars

9 products across 1 category.

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About NVIDIA

A brief history

NVIDIA was founded in Santa Clara, California in 1993 by Jensen Huang, Chris Malachowsky, and Curtis Priem, originally to build graphics accelerators for the emerging PC gaming market. The 1999 launch of the GeForce 256 — marketed as the world's first "GPU" — established the category and the company's vocabulary for it. Through the 2000s NVIDIA traded the consumer-graphics lead with ATI/AMD while quietly building CUDA, the parallel-computing platform released in 2006 that turned GeForce silicon into a general-purpose accelerator. CUDA's adoption inside scientific computing, then deep learning from roughly 2012 onward, repositioned NVIDIA from a gaming-card vendor into the dominant supplier of training and inference hardware for AI. The 2018 RTX 20-series introduced hardware ray tracing and tensor cores to consumer GPUs; the 2020 Ampere generation cemented the lead; and by the 2024–2026 cycle NVIDIA had become the most valuable semiconductor company in the world on the back of data-center demand.

What NVIDIA is known for

NVIDIA's defining advantage on the consumer side is software. DLSS upscaling, DLSS frame generation, Reflex latency reduction, Broadcast, RTX HDR, and the now-mature Studio driver track for creative apps are all stack pieces that competitors continue to chase. On the silicon side, NVIDIA has held a sustained lead in ray-tracing throughput per dollar since the RTX 20 generation, and the tensor cores that originally targeted DLSS are now the substrate for on-device generative-AI features. CUDA remains the single biggest moat in compute — virtually every major ML framework targets it as the first-class backend, which is why GeForce cards double as the entry-level training rig for hobbyist researchers.

Where NVIDIA excels on vsMars

NVIDIA's GeForce RTX line anchors the graphics cards category and dominates the best graphics cards shortlist, particularly in the upper performance tiers where ray-tracing and DLSS weighting matter most. NVIDIA silicon also appears indirectly across gaming PCs, best gaming PCs, laptops, and best laptops — most premium gaming and workstation laptops we score ship with GeForce RTX mobile GPUs. The Shield TV continues to surface in the streaming side of our coverage even years after its last refresh.

Trade-offs to know

NVIDIA's pricing is the obvious cost of the platform lead. GeForce list prices have climbed three generations in a row, the xx90 tier now sits well above $2,000, and even mainstream cards command premiums over AMD equivalents at comparable raster performance. VRAM allocations on mid-range RTX cards have been notably tight relative to AMD competition, which can bite in modern titles at higher texture settings or in local-LLM workloads. The driver track, while feature-rich, has shipped several rocky launches in the RTX 40 and 50 cycles. Linux support has improved sharply with the open-kernel modules but still trails AMD on Wayland and on out-of-the-box installs. Finally, supply allocation increasingly favors data-center customers, and consumer SKUs have been chronically constrained at MSRP for entire generations.

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