Nvidia compares RTX 3050 to GTX 1050 on product page
graph

GPUs are a bit of a hot topic at the moment given they’re so hard to come by. With the chip shortage and crypto mining gobbling them all up, demand for good GPUs for PC Gamers has never been higher. So it’s baffling that companies are using blatantly misleading comparisons when marketing these cards.

On Twitter, Andreas Schilling editor at HardwareLuxx, pointed out some AMD comparison graphs which pit the new entry level AMD Radeon Pro W6400 GPU against a Radeon Pro WX 3200 released in 2019. It’s an odd choice, given the comparisons don’t even make the new card look very good. Two out of the three benchmarks shown simply say comparable, which isn’t what most people want to hear when looking to upgrade.

Tips and advice

The Nvidia RTX 3070 and AMD RX 6700 XT side by side on a colourful background

(Image credit: Future)

How to buy a graphics card: tips on buying a graphics card in the barren silicon landscape that is 2021

Never to be outdone, it looks like team green is also serving up odd comparison graphs. In a reply to Schilling’s tweet, a screenshot from Nvidia’s product page for the RTX 3050 shows an even worse example. For some unfathomable reason, this graph compares an RTX 3050 to a GTX 1650 and GTX 1050. I can hear my brain screaming when I look at it, the 1050 came out in 2016. What is it even doing there? Two of the tests are games with RTX On enabled which I’m sure works brilliantly on a nice old GTX card. As I’d imagine does the DLSS quality mode. I can’t think of any valid reasons to use those cards to compare against a 3050 other than to inflate how powerful it appears.

RTX 3050(2022)vs GTX 1050(2016)?https://t.co/I8BP2AKqRl https://t.co/NlRmAefIt6 pic.twitter.com/srLjJbrW8ZJanuary 19, 2022

See more

It makes AMD’s workstation comparison almost make sense. At least it’s hard to accuse the blue team of trying to make a card look more powerful than it is in these comparisons. These cards are also a bit more niche, so a comparison like that doesn’t seem quite as purposefully odd.

Nvidia’s RTX 3050 is new to the desktop market after being found in gaming laptops for a while. It’s not likely to be a bad card, but these comparisons are just a bit odd. The budget Ampere card was recently revealed to have a price tag of $249 USD, which sounds pretty good especially in the current market and is set to be available by the end of January. Hopefully we’ll actually see stock of these so we can do some benchmarks of our own and compare them to more relevant GPUs.

Written by admin

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *