In total, 13 cards were tested with 8 being Founders Edition and the remaining 5 being from add-in-board partners ASUS and EVGA. We also included the NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti and GeForce GTX 1070 as reference points for those that might not be running one of the newest GeForce models. We’ll be starting with the NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 4GB graphics card that runs $149 and end with the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 Ti 11GB that is priced at $1,199. Today we are armed with a Redshift 3.0 license and will be using the built-in benchmark scene to test nearly all of the current GeForce GTX and RTX offerings from NVIDIA. NVIDIA has also released a slew of new GeForce RTX 2000 series and GeForce 1600 series cards since we last gave Redshift 2.6 a try. Redshift 3.0 is a major update as it supports support for hardware-accelerated ray tracing via NVIDIAs new RTX GPU architecture. Since that article was published, Redshift Rendering Technologies was acquired by Maxon in 2019 and they have rolled out Redshift 3.0. The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2000 series graphics cards had just launched and we wanted to look at GPU performance in Redshift 2.6.+ The last time Legit Reviews took a closer look of Redshift’s fully GPU-accelerated biased renderer for NVIDIA GeForce graphics was back in the fall of 2018.
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