After several leaks, Nvidia has officially unveiled (via Videocardz) the GTX 1630, a new entry-level graphics card for light gaming and everyday computing tasks, with the $150 price tag (approximate price in China, global pricing will be unveiled later).
The Nvidia GeForce GTX 1630 is the first 30-series model under the GTX branding. Still, do not expect much from this puny graphics card, even though it received the letter X in its name. The GTX 1630 features the Turing TU117-150 core with fewer CUDA cores than the GTX 1650. Also, Nvidia has cut its memory bus in half from 128-bit to 64-bit, which might become a problem for modern games. Early benchmarks suggest the GTX 1630 will be slower than the GTX 1050 Ti Nvidia introduced six years ago.
In other aspects, the GTX 1630 is similar to the GTX 1650, the former entry-level GPU in Nvidia's current non-RTX lineup. The new graphics card has the same 4 GB of GDDR6 memory, and TDP is 75W, which means many variants will not require additional power.
GTX 1630 | GTX 1650 | Radeon RX 6400 | |
---|---|---|---|
Chip | Turing TU-117-150 | Turing TU-117-300 | Navi 24 |
Clocks | 1785 MHz | 1590 MHz | 2039 Mhz |
CUDA Cores | 512 | 896 | Not Applicable |
Memory | 4 GB GDDR6 | 4GB GDDR6 | 4 GB GDDR6 |
Memory Bus | 64-bit | 128-bit | 64-bit |
Memory Clock | 12 Gbps | 12 Gbps | 16 Gbps |
Memory Bandwidth | 96 GB/s | 192 GB/s | 128 GB/s |
TDP | 75W | 75W | 53 W |
Do you think $150 is a reasonable price for what the GTX 1630 offers?
Nvidia launches GeForce GTX 1630, its cheapest modern graphics card
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