The GPU-price-hiking mining craze has subsided (at least for now) and enthusiast gamers with deep pockets finally have a pair of new cards to consider in the GeForce RTX 2080 Ti ($1,199 for the Founders Edition model) and the GeForce RTX 2080 ($799 for the Founders Edition version). So, provided that you can actually afford the 2080 Ti and are wondering, which RTX card is right for you? Let's take a look at the price and performance.

Prices are said to start at a more palatable $699 (2080) and $999 (2080 Ti) for non-Founders Edition cards, but it's tough to tell exactly where real-world pricing will land--especially here in the first few days and weeks after launch. At the time of this writing, the least-expensive RTX card we could find on Newegg was a $789 Windforce OC model, and the lowest preorder price we could track down for a 2080 Ti is is $1,179 for a Zotac model. So for now at least, third-party RTX cards seem to be sticking close to the higher price of Nvidia's own overclocked Founders Edition options.

There's also a lesser GeForce RTX 2070 on the way. But it's not slated to arrive until October, so we haven't had a chance to do any testing to see how it compares to its RTX siblings or previous-generation card options.

These new cards also have a number of features that set them apart from previous-generation parts, like RT cores for real-time hybrid ray tracing, as well as AI-focused Tensor cores for Deep Learning Super Sampling (DLSS). We've covered these and more in detail both in our Turing architecture deep dive, and our review of the GeForce RTX 2080 Ti.

For No-Compromise 4K Gaming, Go with the RTX 2080 Ti

There's no getting around the fact that both the RTX 2080 Ti and the RTX 2080 are very expensive. But if it's no-compromise high-end gaming you're after -- particularly if you have a 4K monitor or a high-refresh panel with a 2,560 x 1,440 resolution or better -- the high-end 2080 Ti model is the card for you. As we said in our review, "If you aspire to game at 4K and don’t want to choose between smooth frame rates and maxed-out graphics quality, GeForce RTX 2080 Ti is the card to own. There’s just no way around it." Another way to look at it: You don't want to spend $700 or more for an RTX 2080 and then be disappointed about performance.

If You're Primarily Interested in Ray Tracing You Might Want to Wait

Nvidia focused primarily on ray tracing when it announced the Turing architecture behind its new RTX cards, with CEO Jensen Huang Huang hyping its arrival as “the Holy Grail of our industry.” To be sure, the lighting effects and realistic reflections that the technology enables are striking. But at launch, there were no functioning ray tracing-enabled games, and a fairly short list of titles expected to support ray tracing in the near-term future. Even Battlefield V, the primary title that Nvidia used to show off this key feature, was pushed back until November.

While we have no doubt that there will eventually be several AAA titles sporting impressive ray tracing features, the simple fact right now is that we have no real sense of exactly how demanding ray tracing will be and which card you'd need to achieve playable frame rates at a given resolution. You could of course buy an RTX 2080 Ti, secure in the notion that you'll get the best ray tracing experience possible with these current-generation cards. But if your monitor is stuck at, say, 1080p and you don't plan on upgrading anytime soon, you may be paying hundreds extra for more GPU muscle than you need. We should have a much better sense of ray tracing performance across at least a few titles as we get closer to the end of 2018. If you have a graphics card that can tide you over until then, it may pay to wait before clicking that RTX buy button.

The RTX 2080 Founders Edition Is a Good Fit for 1440p Gaming

As you can see in the charts below, the RTX 2080 doesn't lag that far behind its pricier Ti counterpart, despite costing $400 less. Given the big price difference, that makes the lesser card a much better deal in terms pixel pushing-per dollar. That's not exactly a surprise, as the graphics card that sits one step down from the flagship is often nearly as fast as the top-end card for a lot less money. But usually that discussion revolves around the **80 card model versus the **70 card. Really, though, it's the previous-generation GTX 1070 Ti and GTX 1070 that deliver the best value in terms of frame rates for your money. Nvidia's new cards sit just above the Titan cards in terms of performance per dollar. As we said before, there's no denying that these are expensive cards.

It's unusual for Nvidia to release its Ti variant at the same time as other high-end cards. But at least that means with the 2000-series cards that potential buyers can get a clear picture of high-end performance options in Nvidia's gaming lineup early on. Or rather, we will have that once we get a chance to test an RTX 2070.


n short, what does all that mean for buyers looking to pick up a new high-end card today? We would recommend the Ti variant for those who truly want no-compromise 4K gaming and are willing to spend $1,000 and up to get there. For everyone else, the RTX 2080 delivers most of the Ti's performance for a lot less money, and is a good fit for those with 1440p displays.

But as we mentioned in our 2080 review, the previous-generation GTX 1080 Ti, while it lacks new features like dedicated cores for ray tracing and AI, is nearly as powerful in current games, and readily available for less than $700--about $100 less than the least-expensive RTX 2080 when we wrote this. So if you're mostly interested in traditional gaming performance, rather than the promise of ray tracing and DLSS in future titles, the GTX 1080 Ti is clearly the better buy.

The RTX 2080 Ti May Be Sold Out When You Read This

In some sense, if you're reading this in the days surrounding initial availability of Nvidia's first RTX cards, the discussion about which card to buy may be a bit pointless. As we wrote this just after these cards launched, pre-orders of the 2080 Ti were sold out, both on Nvidia's site and popular sellers like Newegg, while some models (including the Founders Edition) of the stepped-down 2080 were still readily available. Of course, stock scarcity is nothing new for a big graphics card launch. And in-stock availability could change in the coming days. But if you're leaning toward the 2080 Ti for no-compromise 4K gaming, you may have to wait a bit.

Keep in mind that we're also still in the dark about how the RTX 2070 performs. So if you want to spend less money and/or you don't quite need as much performance as the RTX 2080 delivers, it's probably worth waiting a few weeks to find out.