Graphics Cards

47 products

NVIDIA GeForce and AMD Radeon GPUs from ASUS, MSI, and GIGABYTE

Graphics cards determine gaming frame rates, 3D rendering speed, and GPU-accelerated workflow performance more than any other single component. NVIDIA GeForce and AMD Radeon GPUs from ASUS, MSI, and GIGABYTE span entry-level 1080p gaming through enthusiast 4K and professional compute workloads, with custom cooling solutions, factory overclocks, and board designs tailored to each tier. Browse all component categories in the full PC Components collection.

Graphics Cards for Every Use Case

  • Competitive esports at 1080p — GeForce RTX 4060 and Radeon RX 7600 deliver high frame rates in titles like Valorant and Counter-Strike at accessible price points
  • High-refresh 1440p gaming — RTX 4070 and RX 7800 XT push 100+ FPS at 1440p with ray tracing and upscaling technologies for visually demanding AAA titles
  • 4K gaming and content creation — RTX 4080 and RTX 4090 handle 4K at high refresh rates while accelerating video encoding, 3D rendering, and AI-driven creative tools
  • Machine learning and AI workloads — high-VRAM GeForce cards serve as affordable training and inference accelerators for researchers and small teams
  • Multi-monitor productivity — entry-level GPUs with three or four display outputs drive multi-screen office setups without dedicated gaming performance

Choosing the Right Graphics Card

The GPU chip (NVIDIA GeForce or AMD Radeon) determines raw performance, while the board partner (ASUS, MSI, GIGABYTE) determines cooling, clock speeds, noise levels, and physical dimensions. NVIDIA's RTX series offers ray tracing, DLSS upscaling, and CUDA cores for GPU-accelerated applications. AMD's Radeon RX series competes on raw rasterization performance and typically offers more VRAM at comparable price points. Within each GPU tier, board partners offer multiple cooling designs: dual-fan models for compact builds, triple-fan flagships for maximum thermal headroom, and ITX-length cards for small form factor cases.

VRAM, Power, and Physical Dimensions

VRAM capacity determines how much texture data, frame buffer, and AI model data the GPU can hold in fast local memory. Modern AAA games at 4K benefit from 12 GB or more, while AI and 3D rendering workflows scale with available VRAM. Power draw ranges from 150W on entry-level cards to 450W+ on flagship models, requiring a matched PSU with the correct PCIe power connectors (8-pin, 12-pin, or 16-pin 12VHPWR). Physical length matters in compact cases: check clearance specifications before purchasing triple-fan cards that can exceed 330mm.

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