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Nvidia has finally debuted its latest-gen GPUs, the RTX 3000 series, and they look like an awesome proposition. The RTX 3070 is supposedly as powerful as an RTX 2080 Ti, yet comes in at just shy of $500-that’s nearly $700 off the Ti’s RRP. It’s a master stroke in terms of performance leaps, and one we’re very keen to take a look at. But the most curious element for me is the RTX 3090. This is a mammoth card, a beast of a GPU, 24GB of GDDR6X, triple-slot, custom power connectors, and enough CUDA cores to simulate a planet. However, according to Nvidia, it’s capable of driving 8K at 60fps and starts at about $1,500. Just a smidge more than the RTX 2080 Ti did two years back. This got me thinking. Most of the top-end enthusiasts I know run either a 3440x1440 superwide setup, or a 27-inch 1440p screen at 144Hz and above, with just a few 4K gaming guys out there. So the reality is the 3090 would be massive overkill, unless you’re upgrading your monitor. The problem is, although 4K 60fps panels are now in abundance, anything above that will set you back $1,500-plus, so is the RTX 3090 worth it right now? Or will it be hindered by a lack of more affordable 4K panels? If the performance figures are true, it’s a good jump, and a hell of a product, but the rest of the industry needs to catch up.