41score
#62 of 131
Overall rank
NVIDIAEntry

TITAN V CEO Edition

3.6 · 14 votes
Best for 1080p esports gaming

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VRAM
32 GB
CUDA
5,120
FP32
14.9 TF
Bandwidth
868.4 GB/s
TDP
250W
Boost
1455 MHz
Strengths at a Glance

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.

FP32 compute14.9 TFLOPS14%
vs RTX 5090 D: 104.8 TFLOPS
Memory bandwidth868.4 GB/s49%
vs RTX 5090 D: 1790 GB/s
VRAM capacity32 GB100%
vs RTX 5090 D: 32 GB
Shading units5,12024%
vs RTX 5090 D: 21,760
Power efficiency19/10033%
vs RTX 5090 D: 58/100
Synthetic Benchmarks

Estimated benchmark results

Each result is shown as a share of the RTX 5090 D's score in the same test.

3DMark Time Spy14,760pts
vs RTX 5090 D: 36,000 pts
3DMark Port Royal (RT)7,560pts
vs RTX 5090 D: 18,000 pts
Blender (samples/min)2,132spm
vs RTX 5090 D: 5,200 spm
Geekbench Compute103,200pts
vs RTX 5090 D: 240,000 pts

Performance breakdown

Gaming41
Ray tracing42
AI / Compute43
Creator / 3D41
Power efficiency19
Real-World Gaming

FPS Across Resolutions

1080p · Ultra preset1440p · Ultra preset4K · Ultra preset
Cyberpunk 2077avg 35 fps
1080p
48
1440p
36
4K
22
Call of Duty: MW IIIavg 50 fps
1080p
68
1440p
50
4K
31
Alan Wake 2avg 29 fps
1080p
39
1440p
29
4K
18
Forza Horizon 5avg 52 fps
1080p
71
1440p
52
4K
32
Baldur's Gate 3avg 42 fps
1080p
57
1440p
42
4K
26
Community Feedback

What Owners Say

Owners love the massive memory and raw compute power for pro workloads. The biggest gripes are the high power draw and that it runs hot and loud under full load.

Pros
  • Handles giant AI models easily
  • Runs quieter than expected
  • Old Volta still competes well
  • Rare card, feels special
Cons
  • No real gaming performance advantage
  • Lacks modern ray tracing support
  • Very high idle power consumption

Supported technologies

DLSSNVENCAV1 Encode

Full specifications

Graphics processor
Architecture
Volta
Process node
12 nm
Transistors
21.1 B
SM Count
40
Release date
2018
Core configuration
CUDA Cores
5,120
Tensor Cores
640
TMUs
320
ROPs
128
L2 cache
6 MB
Memory
Size
32 GB
Type
HBM2
Bus width
4096-bit
Bandwidth
868.4 GB/s
Memory clock
848 MHz
Clocks & throughput
Base clock
1200 MHz
Boost clock
1455 MHz
FP32 (float)
14.9 TFLOPS
FP16 (half)
14.9 TFLOPS
Pixel rate
186 GPixel/s
Texture rate
465.6 GTexel/s
Board & power
TDP
250W
Suggested PSU
500W
Power connectors
1x 6-pin + 1x 8-pin
Bus interface
PCIe 3.0 x16
Length
267 mm
Slot width
2-slot
Display & outputs
Max resolution
7680×4320
Outputs
1x HDMI, 3x DisplayPort

API and SDK support

DirectX
12 (12_1)
Shader Model
6.4
OpenGL
4.6
OpenCL
1.2
Vulkan
1.2.131
CUDA
7.0
Verdict

Our verdict on the TITAN V CEO Edition

NVIDIA's TITAN V CEO Edition is a Volta compute card with 32 GB of HBM2, but its real limitation is the lack of modern ray tracing hardware.

Get it if you need maximum memory for niche pro workloads like huge datasets, and you already own Volta software. Skip it if you want modern gaming or rendering performance, as newer cards leave this in the dust.

Buy it if…

  • You need more than 24GB VRAM for giant AI models.
  • You want a collector's piece of GPU history.
  • You run ultra-high-res multi-GPU rendering without driver limits.
3.6

14 votes

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