Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Nvidia says the RTX 5080 is ‘about’ 15% faster than the RTX 4080 without DLSS

Add as a preferred source on Google
Nvidia's RTX 5090 sitting at CES 2025.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

Nvidia made some bold claims about its RTX 50-series GPUs when they were announced earlier this month, saying that the new range can outclass their previous-gen counterparts with twice the performance. Although Nvidia’s new lineup might be among the best graphics cards when they launch, the vast majority of the extra performance comes on the back of the new DLSS Multi-Frame Generation feature that’s exclusive to RTX 50-series GPUs.

During Nvidia’s Editor’s Day for Blackwell GPUs at CES 2025, GeForce desktop product manager Justin Walker said that the RTX 5080 was about 15% faster than the RTX 4080 without DLSS 4, and that the RTX 5070 would be about 20% faster than the RTX 4070 without the feature. Nvidia didn’t provide hard performance numbers for any of the new GPUs it’s releasing, so pay careful attention to the “about” at the start of that statement. Walker provided a general impression of the generational uplift you can expect, but it’s important to wait for reviews before drawing any conclusions about the new cards.

In the charts above, you can see what Walker is talking about. Resident Evil 4 doesn’t support DLSS, and Horizon Forbidden West only supports DLSS 3. The other games Nvidia included support 4X Multi-Frame Generation through DLSS 4.

Recommended Videos

It makes sense that the generational uplift isn’t quite as impressive as what Nvidia’s CEO claimed on stage when RTX 50-series GPUs were announced. RTX 50-series GPUs include up to 4X Multi-Frame Generation in supported games, while RTX 40-series GPUs only have access to 2X Frame Generation. With twice as many frames being generated, the new range is ostensibly twice as fast across the board — or, at least, in games that support DLSS 4.

Benchmarks for Nvidia's RTX 5090 graphics card.
Nvidia

Although Nvidia still didn’t provide hard numbers, it did share some ballpark frame rates for the flagship RTX 5090, which we haven’t seen up to this point. In the small sampling of games you can see above, the RTX 5090 is sitting below 50 frames per second (fps) in all four titles at 4K with maximum settings — including path tracing, which all four of these games support. With DLSS 4, Nvidia says you’ll be getting in excess of 250 fps and much lower latency.

On the laptop side of things, Nvidia provided some more concrete numbers. The company says its new range of RTX 50-series mobile GPUs enable 40% better battery life in gaming laptops, and that they’ll be available in laptops as thin as 14.9mm, which may be a call-out to the new Razer Blade 16. A big part of the battery savings comes from a feature Nvidia is calling BatteryBoost. This saves power during gameplay, and it accounts for that 40% improvement in battery life.

Nvidia says BatteryBoost saves power dynamically in games, particularly in scenes with little or no motion, small changes in pixels, or minimal player interaction, such as dialogue sequences. Nvidia claims the new Blackwell architecture has 1,000 times faster frequency response, allowing the GPU to very quickly ramp up and down in frequency, as well as enhanced sleep states. The company says it has reduced the time to enter deep sleep power state by a factor of 10, and those two changes play a big role in the battery savings.

Laptops packing Nvidia’s new GPUs are set to arrive in March, and Nvidia says it will have designs from “every major OEM,” including Lenovo, HP, MSI, Razer, Dell, Acer, Asus, and Gigabyte starting at $1,299 for an RTX 5070 and climbing to $2,899 for an RTX 5090.

Jacob Roach
Former Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
Razer’s new Blade 18 gets Arrow Lake refresh and a modest $3,999.99 starting price
For $3,999.99, you get the base model with Nvidia RTX 5070 Ti. A 5090 variant is available, too.
Razer Blade 18.

Razer has officially unveiled the 2026 Blade 18 today, and at the heart of all three configurations is an Intel Arrow Lake processor. 

I’m talking about the Core Ultra 9 290HX Plus, which features 24 cores, up to 5.5GHz clock speed (with boost), 36MB cache, and an onboard NPU that delivers up to 13 TOPS of compute power. 

Read more
Windows 11 will clean up its own driver mess so you don’t have to
Say goodbye to the nightmare of hunting down broken drivers after a bad Windows update.
Surface laptop on wooden table

It seems that Microsoft is keeping up its promise of making Windows 11 better. After introducing a new low-latency mode that speeds up app launches and an update that fixes the RAM memory leak issue, the tech giant is testing a new feature that addresses one of its most prominent problems. 

The new feature is called Cloud-Initiated Driver Recovery, and it can automatically roll back a broken driver that was pushed to your PC through Windows Update. 

Read more
After flubbing with Siri, Apple plans to host AI agents on the App Store
One problem is about money Apple won't commit to not charging. The other is about AI agents Apple can't figure out how to control. WWDC needs to solve both.
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Apple is currently facing a Siri problem that has nothing to do with Siri at all. With WWDC 2026 just weeks away, The Information reports the company is actively courting developers to integrate their apps with the new Siri coming in iOS 27. 

The mechanism powering the overhauled Siri, App Intents, is an API that lets Siri execute actions inside third-party apps without you actively opening them, which sounds quite useful, I’d say. However, some of the world’s largest developers are dragging their feet on it, not because it’s tough, but because Apple left the door open on charging for it later.

Read more