There's been a lot of skepticism about Jensen Huang's claim that the new Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070 is as fast as the RTX 4090, but Nvidia just gave me the chance to try the two cards side-by-side to see for myself, and the result is astonishing. In Marvel Rivals, the RTX 5070 doesn't just match the RTX 4090, it actually beats it. Is there a catch? Why, of course there is.
The secret behind the CES in of image quality and smoothness.
The two test rigs were set up so that both of them were running the game maxed out at 4K with the highest level of DLSS ed by each GPU. This means the only difference between the two systems in of setup is that the RTX 5070 was running the game with multi frame gen, whereas the RTX 4090 was using standard frame gen.
Consistently, the RTX 4090 system hovered around 180fps, while the RTX 5070 system ran at around 240fps – there was never a time when the RTX 5070 was slower than the 4090. You can see this in the image below, where the RTX 4090 system on the left is running at 186fps, and the RTX 5070 rig on the right is hitting 248fps.
However, Nvidia also stressed that Marvel Rivals is an outlier here, and in most games, the two GPUs are level in of performance (as long as they multi frame gen) – it's just that Marvel Rivals responds particularly well to frame generation.
In action, I honestly couldn't tell the difference between the two systems, and I played the game for several minutes on both of them. Whatever magic Nvidia has worked with multi frame gen (and we'll be able to talk more about that at a later date), it works surprisingly well, at least in this title. The game was smooth and responsive, and I couldn't see any notable glitches on the RTX 5070 system. This $549 GPU can genuinely offer a 4090-level experience in a game that's well optimized for it.
And therein lies the catch. If a game doesn't multi frame gen, then the RTX 4090 will be significantly faster than the RTX 5070, as the underlying GPU has so much more raw horsepower. It also has twice as much VRAM available, with the RTX 5070's meager 12GB locking it out of some of the high settings you can enable on the RTX 4090 at 4K, even if you enable frame gen.
It's an impressive demo, though. With the right setup and the right games, this $549 GPU can genuinely square up to Nvidia's previous $1,599 flagship. If enough games end up ing multi frame gen in DLSS 4, and implement it well, the RTX 5070 looks set to take the best graphics card award in the mid-range category.
The RTX 5090 review, where we run the flagship through our gaming benchmark suite.
Since publishing this story, we've also now written a full Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070 review, where we test out Nvidia's claims about it beating the RTX 4090 in some other games.