GeForce RTX 5090 D V2
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How it stacks up to the flagship
Each metric is shown as a percentage of the GeForce RTX 5090 D, the strongest card we track.
Estimated benchmark results
Each result is shown as a share of the RTX 5090 D's score in the same test.
Performance breakdown
FPS Across Resolutions
What Owners Say
People love the raw speed for 4K gaming and how it handles ray tracing without breaking a sweat. The usual complaint is the insane power draw and heat output, which can be a real pain to cool.
- Handles 4K gaming without breaking stride
- Runs heavy creative software without stutters
- Stays fast for years of new games
- Runs cool even under full load
- Needs a massive power supply.
- Too expensive for most gamers.
- Runs very hot under full load.
Supported technologies
Full specifications
- Architecture
- Blackwell 2.0
- Process node
- 5 nm
- Transistors
- 92.2 B
- SM Count
- 170
- Release date
- 2025
- Launch price
- $2299
- CUDA Cores
- 21,760
- RT Cores
- 170
- Tensor Cores
- 680
- TMUs
- 680
- ROPs
- 176
- L2 cache
- 96 MB
- Size
- 24 GB
- Type
- GDDR7
- Bus width
- 384-bit
- Bandwidth
- 1340 GB/s
- Memory clock
- 1750 MHz
- Base clock
- 2017 MHz
- Boost clock
- 2407 MHz
- FP32 (float)
- 104.8 TFLOPS
- FP16 (half)
- 104.8 TFLOPS
- Pixel rate
- 424 GPixel/s
- Texture rate
- 1636.8 GTexel/s
- TDP
- 575W
- Suggested PSU
- 1100W
- Power connectors
- 1x 16-pin
- Bus interface
- PCIe 5.0 x16
- Length
- 304 mm
- Slot width
- 2-slot
- Max resolution
- 7680×4320
- Outputs
- 1x HDMI 2.1b, 3x DisplayPort 2.1b
API and SDK support
- DirectX
- 12 Ultimate (12_2)
- Shader Model
- 6.8
- OpenGL
- 4.6
- OpenCL
- 3.0
- Vulkan
- 1.4
- CUDA
- 12.0
Our verdict on the RTX 5090 D V2
The RTX 5090 D V2 is a monstrous flagship card that runs hot and hungry, with raw power that only makes sense if your wallet and power supply can take the hit.
Get it if you're building a top-tier gaming or AI workstation and need the absolute fastest graphics available right now. Skip it if you don't need that extreme power and would rather save money with a more sensible card.
Buy it if…
- You edit 8K video and need the VRAM for huge timelines.
- You want max ray tracing in the most demanding upcoming games.
- You run local AI models and need raw compute without compromise.
Its place in the overall top
6 votes