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The Nvidia RTX 30 series, one year on: should you upgrade?RTX off until further notice

RTX off until further notice

An Nvidia GeForce RTX 3090 Founders Edition, installed in a PC.

Even if they don’t recall the exact date, plenty of gaming PC owners will remember what they were doing on September 17th 2020. They, and I, were staring at a black-and-green storefront, mashing F5 until a “Notify me” button changed to read “Out of stock”. This was theNvidia GeForce RTX 3080launch, and what initially looked like a one-off failure of Nvidia’s anti-bot measures ended up heralding the worst year in memory to upgrade a graphics card.

Twelve months later, the roster of RTX 30 series GPUs – all built on Nvidia’s Ampere architecture – has grown to nine models, including more powerful Ti versions of the original RTX 3080 andRTX 3070. Actually buying one, sadly, is only a marginally less awful experience than it was on the RTX 3080’s big day. Considering Nvidia’s tendency to launch new architectures every two years, is it even worth holding out for RTX 30-series stock? Or should you wait a while longer to upgrade?

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If you haven’t been following graphics cards news this past year – understandable, as doing so has repeatedly made me want to eat glass – here’s a basic recap of what’s gone wrong. It was immediately apparent that Nvidia’s supply of RTX 3080, RTX 3070 and even £1,399RTX 3090GPUs wasn’t matching buyer demand, but while this made for a disappointing launch, it wasn’t all that surprising. The then-new range was promising drastically improved performance over the RTX 20 series at mostly restrained prices, so why wouldn’t people want to get on board? Resellers were no doubt adding unwelcome strain, and Nvidia’s store rightly took flak for a lack of effective protection against retail bots, but surely more stock would be on its way.

It wasn’t. Or at least, it was, but only in sporadic, tiny amounts. What initially looked like a ho-hum paper launch was in fact the sum of multiple overlapping demand and supply issues that continue to limit graphic cards supplies today. And CPU supplies, and games console supplies, and even the supplies of some cars.

A photo of Zotac’s GeForce RTX 3080 Ti AMP Holo graphics card

Perhaps, then, the question needs wording differently. Maybe it’s not so much about how long you should hold out for, it’s a matter of how much bullshit you’re prepared to wade through in exchange for a good GPU. And that’s the biggest shame – these are good GPUs! We’ve got three RTX 30 models in our best graphics card rankings, and even if you don’t go for the Ti models, the RTX 3080 and RTX 3070 have hardly aged when it comes to high-resolution performance. The lack of real entry-level/1080p models is unfortunate, but under normal circumstances, most of the existing RTX 30 series would get a recommendation in a heartbeat. Yes, even with the rumoured RTX 40 series seemingly arriving next year.

A photo of Nvidia’s GeForce RTX 3080 Founders Edition graphics card next to the RTX 3070 Founders Edition

(Speaking of rumours, there may also be an RTX 3080 Super and RTX 3070 Super coming in 2022, but so far these pretty much just exist in the form of social media gossip. If anything like the old RTX 2070 Super and RTX 2080 Super they’d also be more expensive, which doesn’t sound appealing given the inflation situation, so I’m not convinced they’re worth considering if you’re weighing up a GPU upgrade right now.)

In these very much abnormal circumstances, though, not even the RTX 30 series’ brawniness necessarily makes for a worthwhile upgrade. Going restock-chasing might be justified if the cards were being sold at RRP, or slightly above for a quality partner card model, but when they’re hundreds of pounds over as a matter of course? Even if you beat the resellers and the miners to available stock, outside of some truly obscene luck, all you’d ultimately be winning is the opportunity to get ripped off. And there’s no refuge to be found in the equivalent AMD Radeon RX 6000 series either, as it’s facing the same perfect storm of supply and demand problems as Nvidia’s lineup, right down to the inflated prices.

I know the allure of thenew shiny thingas well as anyone, but considering both the miserable state of the GPU market and the likelihood of that misery extending well into next year, I do think the smarter move is to wait. Yeah, it sucks to make that call on purely economic reasoning, regardless of the quality of the cards, and especially whenray tracing and DLSS supportis on the rise. Still, it’s better to be patient than to be taken advantage of, no matter how bouncy the light rays are.