Sorry, but the RTX 5090 is outdated: The NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 is in town

Grildon Tundy

Gold Member
Per the benchmarks below, the RTX PRO 6000 outperforms the 5090 at 4K...but at what cost? Uh...well... $9500.

96GB of GDDR7 VRAM & DLSS 4 support.

I was curious if people had benchmarked this Enterprise GPU for gaming, and, sure enough, they had. These were taken from Gamers' Nexus.

Cyberpunk (Max settings, no RT):
iKd8fRulC1dUnhIW.jpg


Black Myth: Wukong
KsocSQmQou7VfkBE.jpg


Dragon's Dogma 2:
fghgx1EIpUmMwJmO.jpg


Assuming you could get a 5090 for $3000 and an RTX PRO 6000 for $9500, what's the dollar per Frame Per Second value?

Cyberpunk:
5090 = $3000 / 95fps = $32 per FPS
6000 = $9500 / 108fps = $88 per FPS

Black Myth: Wukong:
5090 = $35 per FPS
6000 = $103 per FPS

Dragon's Dogma 2:
5090 = $23 per FPS
6000 = $68 per FPS

Video time-stamped to the start of gaming benchmarks:


So, who's looking to upgrade?
 
These GPUs are made to Power off AI Data Centers. Idk why you would buy one unless you are a millionaire
Nah, these are more professional workstation cards, but yeah, they are for very specific work purposes not for gaming, lol.

There is also a 5000 Pro with "only" 48GB.

Edit: A 96GB card would be pretty sweet to run that new Open-AI OSS model since that fits into 80GB.
 
Last edited:
These GPUs are made to Power off AI Data Centers. Idk why you would buy one unless you are a millionaire
Before 5000-series cards came out to the public I remember reading they were already available for corporate stuff (as you mentioned).

Are they the same kinds of cards gamers could buy later on when it's available to them? Or are they different?

So if series 6000 is benchmarked, give it some time and it'll be sold in stores?
 
Before 5000-series cards came out to the public I remember reading they were already available for corporate stuff (as you mentioned).

Are they the same kinds of cards gamers could buy later on when it's available to them? Or are they different?

So if series 6000 is benchmarked, give it some time and it'll be sold in stores?
You can buy one on Amazon right now:
 
Before 5000-series cards came out to the public I remember reading they were already available for corporate stuff (as you mentioned).

Are they the same kinds of cards gamers could buy later on when it's available to them? Or are they different?

So if series 6000 is benchmarked, give it some time and it'll be sold in stores?
Normally they make a chip design and then sell successively cut down versions of it.

All the 5000 chips are Blackwell. This is Blackwell too. The biggest Blackwell chip is named GB202. This is GB202, but so is the 5090. It seems like they are getting this performance from more/faster memory and other stuff I have no idea what.
 
Last edited:
I'll take 3.

A wise man told me "the more you buy, the more you save". I couldn't see how that could be true but he wore a leather jacket and someone wearing such fine threads wouldn't lie, right?
 
Last edited:
Oh look, a slim, nice looking, and apparently sufficiently cooled, powerful GPU! Who would've thought. Why do we need a gazillion awful, shit looking and ridiculously HUGE "gamer" branded consumer GPUs again?
 
In before someone comes in the thread and says something dumb like "You could buy 15 PS5 Pros for that price!" and complains about how they were told PC gaming was cheaper than consoles
 
Normally they make a chip design and then sell successively cut down versions of it.

All the 5000 chips are Blackwell. This is Blackwell too. The biggest Blackwell chip is named GB202. This is GB202, but so is the 5090. It seems like they are getting this performance from more/faster memory and other stuff I have no idea what.

The Pro 6000 is much less cut versus the 5090 (188 SMs vs 170) plus the extra ram and a higher power target too (600 W vs 575)
 
Top Bottom