HomeHardwareFeatures

Best graphics cards: the top gaming GPUsOur top graphics card picks for 1080p, 1440p, and 4K

Our top graphics card picks for 1080p, 1440p, and 4K

Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun

Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun

Several gaming GPUs, including a couple of the best graphics cards (the RTX 4070 Ti and RTX 3070) on a table.

New year, new best graphics card contenders. Understandably, all eyes are currently onNvidia’s RTX 50 series, which spans the mid-range RTX 5070 all the way up to the RTX 5090 and its apparently-not-a-joke $1999 price tag. They’ll be launching from January 30th onwards, but in the meantime, let’s not forget the much more budget-friendlyIntel Arc B580, which has what it takes to knock theRTX 4060off its 1080p perch.

Truth be told, Nvidia could do with some more spirited competition, especially since they’ve gone all-in on pitching their GPUs on their features as much as their core performance. Chief among these isDLSS, their best-in-class upscaler, as well as the frame generation trickery ofDLSS 3– and now DLSS 4 as well, courtesy of the RTX 50 series. AMD have seriously struggled to keep up, theirFSR 3proving an unreliable equivalent, though the Arc B580 does put in a good showing with Intel XeSS 2. It also suggests that Intel are catching up with the GeForce range on ray tracing performance, another RTX strong suit.

How To Install A Graphics CardWatch on YouTube

How To Install A Graphics Card

Cover image for YouTube video

In short, there’s a lot more to take into account when picking the “best” GPUs than just how they run on regularly rendered, non-upscaled games. Hence why they all get thoroughly tested in a variety of benchmarks, and at different resolutions, so you can be sure that the one you pick is the best possible fit for your PC setup.

Whether youshouldbuy right now is a different matter – at least for those in the market for a higher-end model, I’d wait to see how the RTX 50 series (and perhapsAMD’s Radeon RX 9070 GPUs) turn out. If, though you do absolutely need a graphics card right this second – who knows, maybe you just want tobuild a tower out of them– then these are the best of the currently available bunch.

The best graphics cards for gaming

Intel Arc B580

The best 1080p graphics card

Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun

The Intel Arc B580 graphics card on a table.

I had to deliberate for a while whether the RTX 4060 should remain our top 1080p pick, or whetherIntel Arc B580was a deserving replacement. The RTX 4060, after all, offers DLSS 3 – a far more widely-supported upscaler/frame generation tool than the B580’s XeSS 2. When I tested on an older CPU, they also performed nearly identically, perhaps with a slight advantage to the 4060.

The Arc B580’s Battlemage architecture also seems like a general improvement over Alchemist, the basis of cards like theArc A750. Besides being more stable (i.e. less crash-prone), it also manages these performance feats straight out the box – not after months of driver updates, like Alchemist needed.

Read more in ourIntel Arc B580 review

Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 Ti

The best 1440p graphics card

Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun

The  MSI GeForce RTX 4060 Ti Gaming X Trio graphics card on top of a desk.

For a Quad HD-tuned PC, there’s a tough call to make between the AMD Radeon RX 7700 XT and this, the 8GB version of theNvidia GeForce RTX 4060 Ti. The Radeon is faster in non-ray-traced, native rez games, and offers more VRAM, packing 12GB.

I’d still go for the RTX 4060 Ti, though, because it overturns its performance disadvantage once you start making use of all its toys. DLSS upscaling looks nicer than FSR’s, but there’s also the RTX 4060 Ti’s drastically superior ray tracing performance, and the possibility of enabling DLSS 3 to send framerates soaring.

Even standard DLSS upscaling can be enough to spin things in the RTX 4060 Ti’s favour. InCyberpunk 2077, it could average 46fps at 1440p with maxed settings, Psycho ray tracing, and DLSS on Quality; the RX 7700 XT could only manage 38fps using Quality FSR.

Read more in ourNvidia GeForce RTX 4060 Ti review

Nvidia RTX 4070 Super

The best graphics card for ultrawide gaming monitors

Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun

tHE Gigabye GeForce RTX 4070 Super Aero OC graphics card on a table.

TheNvidia GeForce RTX 4070 Superis a surprisingly potent upgrade on the originalRTX 4070, gaining a marked performance uplift (especially at higher resolutions) without raising the price. You could even use it for some decent 4K, but it’s excellent for ultrawide resolutions as well. With ray tracing or upscaling, it’s either level with or slightly faster than the AMD Radeon RX 7800 XT on speed, and beats it outright whenever RT effects or DLSS upscaling are in play.

That alone is enough to take the 7800 XT’s spot in this list, but the RTX 4070 Super also supports DLSS 3, which enjoys compatibility with a much wider selection of games than AMD’s FSR 3. And even if it didn’t, FSR 3 works on Nvidia cards anyway, so the RTX 4070 Super loses out on nothing.

Read more in ourNvidia GeForce RTX 4070 Super review

Nvidia GeForce RTX 4080 Super

The best graphics card for 4K

Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun

The Asus ROG Strix GeForce RTX 4080 Super Gaming OC Edition graphics card on a desk.

Maybe a slightly contentious pick here – myNvidia GeForce RTX 4080 Superreview wasn’t especially glowing. But that was mainly down to its lack of a clear performance upgrade over theRTX 4080, in contrast to the RTX 4070 Super’s improved FPS-slinging.

It’s true that I wish the RTX 4080 Super took a bigger leap forward, but itdoesbeat the RTX 4080 on price, despite being the newer, quicker version. That’s a big deal, as the biggest issue with the previous GPU was its unreasonable outlay. 4K performance was never a problem in itself, and the RTX 4080 Super maintains that ability to run max-quality, optionally ray-traced games at a fast clip. Factor in the lower cost, and its status as the best graphics card for 4K is the result of a simple numbers game.

(There’s also theRTX 4090, of course, but I don’t recommend that unless you’re a shipping magnate or are no more than fifth in line to a throne.)

Read more in ourNvidia GeForce RTX 4080 Super review

Frequently asked questions

Remember how in 2020-21, it was basically impossible to buy a new graphics card before some bot-wielding scalper cretin pinched all the stock? And how all that demand led to retailers jacking their prices up severalfold? All of that has largely calmed down now, but graphics card still trend more expensively they did before that miserable period. Manufacturers attribute this to higher research and manufacturing costs, though considering the likes of the RTX 30 series sold out instantly despite massive inflation, it’s very possible that sellers saw how much people are willing to pay for new GPUs and simply continue to take advantage.

Ray tracing can be a huge upgrade to how your games handle lighting, shadows and reflections, but you need compatible GPU to take advantage of it. Right now, that includes all of Nvidia’s RTX GPUs, from the 20 series to the 50 series, as well as of AMD’s desktop-grade Radeon GPUs from the RX 6000 series onwards. Intel’s Arc graphics cards support ray tracing as well.

An age old question, the answer to which seemingly used to change with every generation of new GPUs. Recently, however, Nvidia have dominated, despite AMD Radeon GPUs sometimes matching them on rasterised performance and often beating them on price. Nonetheless, the RTX range’s vastly superior ray tracing capabilities, as well as their support for DLSS (and more recently, DLSS 3 frame generation) typically makes the investment easier to justify.