Owning the latest GPUs from both Nvidia and AMD made me realize that software matters more than hardware in 2026
Owning two high-end GPUs is a huge luxury, and it's not lost on me that during these trying times for PC enthusiasts, having even one current-gen card is an amenity. I'm blessed enough to play with hardware for my job, and being able to have two systems running the latest cards from AMD and Nvidia has taught me something valuable about GPU purchases. I picked up the RX 9070 XT first, drawn in by AMD's value pitch and the promise that RDNA 4 had finally closed the gap. The RTX 5080 came later as an addition to my test suite, and while the RX 9070 XT is undoubtedly the stronger card in a value sense, seeing both side-by-side in person showed me that software is genuinely worth paying extra for in a GPU.
Owning two high-end GPUs is a huge luxury, and it’s not lost on me that during these trying times for PC enthusiasts, having even one current-gen card is an amenity. I’m blessed enough to play with hardware for my job, and being able to have two systems running the latest cards from AMD and Nvidia has taught me something valuable about GPU purchases. I picked up the RX 9070 XT first, drawn in by AMD’s value pitch and the promise that RDNA 4 had finally closed the gap. The RTX 5080 came later as an addition to my test suite, and while the RX 9070 XT is undoubtedly the stronger card in a value sense, seeing both side-by-side in person showed me that software is genuinely worth paying extra for in a GPU.
Inés Domínguez
Spain
Spain
Published by: aplhsindia.in
