Hearing the word Super we either start thinking of Mario, or singing songs from South Park. Nvidia are never one to rest on their laurels and whilst in the old days an updated card was usually given the Titanium - Ti - branding, the newest additions to the Nvidia RTX range have the suffix of Super. There is also an RTX 2080 Super available, but for today we're just looking at the two more mainstream priced models. The RTX 2070 is a little more expensive but a little more powerful, otherwise having all the benefits of the RTX 2060 but with better performance at the higher resolutions. Add in the benefits to image quality that Ray Tracing brings in supported titles, and the ability of the Tensor cores to give you amazing image fidelity with Deep Learning Super Sampling - DLSS - and actually gain you frames per second rather than cost you them as most anti-aliasing technologies do, and it's a clear winner. That isn't to say that it can't handle the higher resolutions, merely that it is a fit and forget option at 1080P, letting you put every game settings up to the maximum without a moments consideration as to the impact upon your frame rate. It's an absolute monster at the most popular gaming resolution, 1920x1080 without costing a kidney. The RTX 2060 in particular has been flying off the shelves almost as fast as Nvidia can produce the Turing GPUs that power them. The Nvidia RTX cards brought Ray Tracing and improved Super Sampling to the market and there is no doubting at all that they have proved to be a roaring success.
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