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

Nvidia promises RTX 4090 performance in a $1,300 laptop

Add as a preferred source on Google
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang holding an RTX 50 GPU and a laptop.
Nvidia

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang just unveiled the RTX 50-series, including both desktop cards like the beastly RTX 5090 and laptop variants. As far as laptop gamers go, there’s a lot to get hyped for here, as these GPUs might end up being some of the best graphics cards in terms of performance. Huang promises to deliver RTX 4090-level performance in a $1,300 laptop, and that’s at half the thermal design power (TDP).

During the CES 2025 keynote, Huang spoke about the various GPUs that are on the way to laptops. Availability starts in March, and although no precise release dates have been given yet, we know what to expect in terms of pricing, and we also have a bit of a clue about the performance.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announcing Blackwell laptops.
Nvidia

Nvidia’s laptop lineup is fleshed out from the get-go, with the RTX 5090, RTX 5080, RTX 5070 Ti, and the RTX 5070 arriving in March. It’s the RTX 5070 variant that caught my eye. Huang claims that these laptops will start at $1,300 — which is fairly comparable to RTX 40-series variants, if slightly pricier — but they’ll pack performance comparable to an RTX 4090 at half the power.

Recommended Videos

Huang showed off a fairly slim laptop, marveling at the fact that a massive GPU like the Blackwell card he’d been holding fit inside a small chassis. He credits AI for the ability to supercharge laptops with that kind of performance.

“We’re generating most of the pixels using our Tensor cores. So, we ray trace only the pixels we need, and we generate (using artificial intelligence) all the other pixels we have. As a result, the energy efficiency is off the charts,” said Huang. “The future of computer graphics is neural rendering.”

RTX 50 laptop prices.
Nvidia

The RTX 5070-powered laptops will start at $1,299 and will be equipped with 800 AI tera operations per second (TOPS). This metric is hardly the most interesting one to gamers, but it does make a lot of sense in the context of DLSS 4 and how much Nvidia is truly leaning into AI with this generation. The RTX 5070 Ti bumps the price up to $1,599 and TOPS up to 1,000, followed by the RTX 5080 with 1,350 TOPS and a price tag of $2,199 and up.

Unsurprisingly, laptops equipped with the RTX 5090 — standing at a mighty 1,850 AI TOPS — will cost a fortune, starting at $2,899 and above. For context, the desktop version of the RTX 5090 has a recommended list price of $1,999.

I’ll be looking forward to benchmarking some of the best gaming laptops with RTX 50 GPUs once they begin rolling out. If that “RTX 4090 performance” claim turns out to be true, Nvidia might have a hit on its hands.

Monica J. White
Monica is a computing writer at Digital Trends, focusing on PC hardware. Since joining the team in 2021, Monica has written…
Macbook Neo stress test shows Apple could’ve made it run cooler with a simple fix
This simple mod makes the MacBook Neo faster.
Apple MacBook Neo with users hands on it

Apple's MacBook Neo arrived as a shock to the industry. It is the new cheap MacBook that is designed to be silent, efficient, and affordable. But a new stress test suggests that it could have been noticeably better with a very simple change.

As per a recent test, the addition of a basic copper plate to the cooling setup can improve both thermals and performance by a meaningful margin. And the frustrating part? It isn't some complex engineering overhaul and is relatively straightforward.

Read more
The Mac Pro is dead at Apple, and I’ll miss the cheese-grater powerhouse
RIP Mac Pro. The Mac Studio is taking the throne, and we're okay with that.
Electronics, Computer, Pc

Apple has officially discontinued the Mac Pro. It’s been removed from Apple’s website, and Apple has confirmed to 9to5Mac that there are no plans to release a future version. The buy page now redirects to Apple’s Mac homepage, where the Mac Pro no longer exists.

Why did Apple kill the Mac Pro?

Read more
March Madness, Revisited: The AI Model Did Well. But Mad Things Still Happen
Stills from NCAA games.

(NOTE: This article is part of an ongoing series documenting an experiment with using AI to fill the NCAA brackets and see how it fares against years of human experience. The original article is as follows.)

A week ago, I wrote about entering an NCAA tournament pool with a more disciplined process than I usually use.

Read more