Happy New Year, dear reader! We are now in the third calendar year in a row with lousy availability of electronics, and we celebrate this by testing a new flagship video card that no one should buy in today’s market.
Gigabyte RTX 3090 Gaming OC is the first video card to be sharpened on our new test bench. At the time of writing, it is surprisingly enough in stock, but right enough for the neat sum of 28,000 kroner – 9,000 more than what it costs at launch.
This is a meaningless video card for gaming. It is only a few months since this version was out to 22,000 kroner, and then it was not too crazy compared to the launch price. But Nvidia has completely beaten the RTX 3090 for players with the RTX 3080 Ti. It can get from around 18,000 kroner now, and in practice gives the network the same benefit.
AMD’s top card RX 6900 XT is also in stock. It costs 10,000 less than the RTX 3090, where you get both high performance and plenty of video memory. At the same time, Nvidia is about to launch both the RTX 3090 Ti and an upgraded RTX 3080 with 12 GB of video memory.
We still take a look at the video card. This is going to be our solid trot in graphics analysis of games in the future, and then we just as easily write a proper test. But as usual, I miss the point, as the prices are at a completely different level than what the producers advertise with.
The Nvidia RTX 3090 video card is equipped with 24 GB of GDDR6X video memory, 10496 CUDA cores and a boost clock speed of 1695 MHz. Gigabyte’s Gaming OC keel lifts the clock speed to 1755 MHz, but in practice the card clocks to well over 2000 MHz out of the box.