Graphics Cards
Desktop graphics cards from NVIDIA and AMD, covering current-generation RTX 50 Series and Radeon RX 9000 Series cards through to previous-generation options. Board partners include Gigabyte, MSI, ASUS, Palit, XFX, and Sapphire. Browse by GPU generation to narrow your choice by platform and performance tier.
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MSI nVidia Geforce RTX 3050 VENTUS 2X XS 8G OC Video Card, 1807 MHz Boost Clock, GDDR6, PCI-E 4.0, 3x DisplayPort 1.4a, 1x HDMI 2.1(NEW)
Regular price $599.00Regular priceSale price $599.00
Graphics Cards
Desktop Graphics Cards for Gaming, Creative Work, and AI
Everyday Home Living stocks a comprehensive range of desktop graphics cards from the world's leading GPU manufacturers, covering both NVIDIA GeForce and AMD Radeon platforms. The range includes current-generation NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 Series and AMD Radeon RX 9000 Series cards from board partners Gigabyte, MSI, ASUS, Palit, XFX, and Sapphire, along with selected previous-generation models.
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 Series
The NVIDIA RTX 50 series is NVIDIA's current-generation desktop GPU family, built on the Blackwell architecture with GDDR7 memory and PCI Express 5.0. The range spans the RTX 5050 through to the flagship RTX 5080, covering entry-level through to high-end gaming and professional workloads. All RTX 50 series cards support DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation for AI-assisted frame rate boosting and full ray tracing capability.
AMD Radeon RX 9000 Series
The AMD Radeon RX 9000 series is AMD's current-generation GPU family built on the RDNA 4 architecture, covering the RX 9060, RX 9060 XT, and RX 9070 XT. RDNA 4 delivers a major rasterisation and ray tracing performance improvement over RDNA 3, with hardware ray tracing accelerators and FSR 4 upscaling support.
Choosing the Right GPU
For 1080p and 1440p gaming, the RTX 5060 Ti, RTX 5060, and RX 9060 XT represent strong value. For 4K gaming or demanding creative workloads including 3D rendering, video editing, and AI inference, the RTX 5070 and above or RX 9070 XT deliver the higher memory bandwidth and compute throughput needed.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between RTX 5060, 5060 Ti, 5070, and 5080?
Within the RTX 50 series, the model number indicates the performance tier. The RTX 5060 is the entry-level current-gen card suited to 1080p gaming. The RTX 5060 Ti (available in 8GB and 16GB VRAM variants) steps up to stronger 1080p and capable 1440p performance. The RTX 5070 delivers high-end 1440p and capable 4K performance. The RTX 5080 is the flagship consumer card suited to 4K gaming with highest ray tracing and AI performance. Higher model numbers also typically include more VRAM, faster memory bandwidth, and more CUDA cores.
Does the RTX 50 series require a new power supply?
RTX 50 series cards use a 16-pin PCIe power connector (sometimes labelled 600W). If your existing power supply uses standard 8-pin PCIe connectors, most cards include an adapter cable in the box. Higher-end models (RTX 5070 Ti, 5080) require a higher-wattage power supply — typically 750W to 850W for the card alone. Check the specific product's recommended system power before purchasing.
What is RDNA 4 and how does it differ from RDNA 3?
RDNA 4 is AMD's current GPU architecture, used in the RX 9000 series. Compared to RDNA 3 (RX 7000 series), RDNA 4 delivers substantially improved ray tracing performance through new hardware ray tracing accelerators, improved rasterisation performance per compute unit, support for FSR 4 (FidelityFX Super Resolution 4) with machine learning upscaling, and higher memory bandwidth through GDDR6 with improved cache architecture.