Nvidia RTX 4090 GPU shows blistering frame rates in Overwatch 2

Flagship graphics card hits over 500 fps in Overwatch 2 at 1440p

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Nvidia’s RTX 4090can achieve over 500 frames per second (fps) in Overwatch 2 at 1440p resolution, a ridiculously fluid level of gameplay – with a notable caveat we’ll come back to later on the monitor front – Team Green itself has told us.

To be precise,Nvidia’s own benchmarkingshows the shooter (which was released just yesterday) running at 507 fps on average with the RTX 4090, and this was at 1440p with max graphics settings (the test rig paired the GPU with anIntelCore i9-12900K CPU, by the way).

As for theRTX 408016GB, that achieved 368 fps, and the lesser RTX 4080 with 12GB (cough,RTX 4070, ahem) still managed 296 fps.

For last-gen comparisons, the RTX 3080 hit 249 fps, and the RTX 3070 weighed in with 195 fps, with the RTX 3060 achieving 122 fps, all with the same rig and settings of course.

Nvidiarecommends the RTX 3060 for those who want to get 144 fps in 1080p (Full HD as opposed to 1440p), and the RTX 3080 Ti for those looking at 360 fps again at 1080p.

Analysis: The advantage of resolution as well as superfast fps

Analysis: The advantage of resolution as well as superfast fps

We normally think of Nvidia’s flagships like the RTX 4090 asgraphics cardsbuilt to tackle high-resolution gaming (4K, or even8Kwith the new Lovelace top dog), but of course competitive gamers want to go the other route – not more detail, but more frames is the priority. That provides the smoothest possible gameplay experience.

Seeing 500 frames per second being broken in Overwatch 2 is quite a feat, remembering that this isn’t 1080p resolution either – it’s a step up from that at 1440p, which gives you far better image quality (and sharpness) than Full HD. And as Nvidia points out, going to 1440p can have some advantages over 1080p in terms of pinpoint aiming like a headshot, noting: “Our research found that 1440p 27-inch displays can improve aiming by up to 3% over traditional 1080p 24-inch displays, when aiming at small targets, such as an enemy’s head.”

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Add your own seasoning, naturally, and there are new G-Sync monitors of the 27-inch 1440p variety in the pipeline and arriving soon, from Asus, with a 360Hz refresh rate. So the RTX 4080 16GB will be able to fully drive and exploit that refresh rate as the above benchmarks show (360Hz meaning it can display 360 fps).

Obviously, don’t forget that you need ahigh-end monitor with a superfast refresh rateto actually display the staggering amount of fps generated by these GPUs in the presented scenarios for Overwatch 2.

And yes,there is a 500Hz monitor comingfrom Asus – capable of displaying 500 fps –  though we’re not sure when, and at any rate, it’s 1080p and likely to cost anarmand a leg (and possibly another arm). There are 480Hz models supposedly due next year, too, but these kind of monitors are going to be the province of proesportsgamers who are willing to spend whatever it takes to get even the slightest competitive edge.

As a final note, comparing the relative price of the two RTX 4080 models and performance here, you’re paying a third more for the top-tier (16GB) 4080, but getting a performance boost of a quarter versus the 12GB variant. So, this does make it seem like Nvidia has pushed pricing a little harder with the faster RTX 4080, but obviously we can’t make comparisons like this on the basis of a single game – it’s more an interesting observation than anything.

We’ll need full reviews of both RTX 4080 versions to draw conclusions on this front, naturally, though it’d be no surprise to see the lower-tier being the value champ for overall price/performance ratio.

ViaVideoCardz

Darren is a freelancer writing news and features for TechRadar (and occasionally T3) across a broad range of computing topics including CPUs, GPUs, various other hardware, VPNs, antivirus and more. He has written about tech for the best part of three decades, and writes books in his spare time (his debut novel - ‘I Know What You Did Last Supper’ - was published by Hachette UK in 2013).

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