The launch of Nvidia's RTX 50-series hasn't gone well so far, and it seems that things aren't about to improve anytime soon.
Nvidia's new 50-series graphics cards just aren't as good at running certain older games as previous hardware generations ...
The once popular PhysX graphics technology by Nvidia is now out of support, leaving fans of the legacy games it powers ...
With removal of hardware support for 32-bit PhysX, the likes of the RTX 5090 and RTX 5070 no longer accelerate this fancy ...
NVIDIA is making it easier to get an RTX 5080 FE or RTX 5090 FE with the help of a new priority access program.
Nvidia has quietly retired 32-bit PhysX support on RTX 50 series GPUs — a game-specific graphics technology that was advertised heavily during the 2000s and early 2010s. Nvidia confirmed the ...
Recent filings with the Eurasian Economic Commission (EEC) by popular GPU manufacturer Zotac (spotted by @harukaze5719 on X), have unveiled potential new additions to Nvidia’s RTX 50-series ...
If you load up a 32-bit game now with PhysX enabled (or forced in a config file) and a 50-series Nvidia GPU installed, there's a good chance the physics work will be passed to the CPU instead of ...
The RTX 5070 Ti is now available, but just like the 5080 and 5090, it's difficult to find one in stock at major retailers.
And as you can see in the video just above, PhysX just doesn’t run terribly well without a GPU’s assistance ... the latest evidence that its RTX 50-series cards aren’t the upgrades we ...
NVIDIA support responded by stating: This is expected behavior as 32-bit CUDA applications are deprecated on GeForce RTX 50 series GPUs: With NVIDIA's PhysX officially dead, owners of the RTX 5000 ...