The latest RTX 4090 number-porn rumour suggests a GPU with more than 75B transistors
If true, Nvidia will be really pushing the reticle limit of GPU production with the new Lovelace generation flagship.
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
I can’t wait for next week to roll around and for us to finally get some concrete numbers about Nvidia’s newRTX 40-series graphics cards, because I cannot cope with all the ‘holy heck, if this is true…’ rumours popping upevery single day.
The latest is that the AD102 expected to be powering theRTX 4090is going to have 165% more transistors than the freakishly beefy GA102 monster that ran theRTX 3090 Ti. Yes, yet another tweaker has come out with some GPU number porn: here’s@kopite7kimiclaiming that Nvidia’s full-fat Lovelace chip is going to be sporting more than 75 billion transistors.
For a full frame of reference, the RTX 3090 Ti’s GPU houses 28.3 billion transistors inside its massive 628mm² die, and the Navi 21 chip insideAMD’s RX 6950 XTcomes in at 26.8 billion in a 520mm² die.
I get that the Lovelace GPU of the RTX 40-series is going to operate with a smaller TSMC N5 (nominally 5nm) production process, as opposed to the Samsung 8nm and TSMC N7 (7nm) lithography of our reference chips above, but still, that’s going to be an absolutely enormous graphics processors.
Surely right at the reticle limits; as big a GPU as it is physically possible to manufacture with today’s technology.
Given that the RTX 4090 is expected to offer something in the region of twice the performance of theRTX 3090, you’d expect it to be bigger. But this suggests Nvidia has needed to throw a whole lot more logic at the problem to be able to top its previous biggest GPU to this level.
The transistor number has come from an update to an old tweet of the serial Twitter leaker. Back in April they set up a Twitter poll asking users to guess how many transistors (“xtors”) the AD102 GPU would have. The options were 40–50 billion, 50–60 billion, 60–70 billion, and 70–80 billion.
The biggest gaming news, reviews and hardware deals
Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.
Just over 39% of respondents went for the latter option, which @kopite7kimi has now stated is “the right choice.”
Remember this. 😁Most people made the right choice. More than 75B.September 13, 2022
Best gaming PC: The top pre-built machines from the prosBest gaming laptop: Perfect notebooks for mobile gaming
Honestly, that’s pretty startling. Not that 39% have supposedly got it right, but that Nvidia is really going to create a consumer-facing GPU with such a huge amount of cutting edge silicon inside it. I mean, this is some real brute force, sledgehammer graphics card creation stuff right here.
And sure to be priced to match.
Once again I have to go back to the novelty-size graphics card looks of the RTX 3090 Founders Edition in the system in front of me right now. That card always makes me laugh when I actually take the time to look at it. It’s frankly a ridiculous-size graphics card.
Fingers crossed the RTX 4090 looks a whole lot more elegant a device when it finally hits the limelight atNvidia’s GeForce Beyond Special Broadcaston Tuesday September 20.
Dave has been gaming since the days of Zaxxon and Lady Bug on the Colecovision, and code books for the Commodore Vic 20 (Death Race 2000!). He built his first gaming PC at the tender age of 16, and finally finished bug-fixing the Cyrix-based system around a year later. When he dropped it out of the window. He first started writing for Official PlayStation Magazine and Xbox World many decades ago, then moved onto PC Format full-time, then PC Gamer, TechRadar, and T3 among others. Now he’s back, writing about the nightmarish graphics card market, CPUs with more cores than sense, gaming laptops hotter than the sun, and SSDs more capacious than a Cybertruck.
Intel’s Battlemage GPUs rumoured to arrive in December, well ahead of AMD and Nvidia’s next-gen chips
Nvidia’s upgrading GeForce Now’s $10 tier with 1440p and Ultrawide resolutions, but the only extra Ultimate users get is a new 100-hour play limit
Listen to an old ’80s arcade sound chip replicating the sound of birds, a whistle, and even a jackhammer