- The new benchmarks suggest that RTX 5070 is up to 20% faster than RTX 4070
- It is ready for launch on March 5, in the middle of the preparation for the launch of the Radeon RX 9000 series of AMD
- The reports suggest that the RTX 5070 will not face the same stock problems as its Blackwell counterparts
The launch of the GPU range of the NVIDIA RTX 5000 series is apparently completed – since the RTX 5060 of office has not been officially announced – with the RTX 5070 planned for the release on March 5. However, we may already have a little knowledge could bring to the table.
As indicated by WCCFTECH, reference leaks reveal that the RTX 5070 will have up to 20% of better performance than its predecessor, the RTX 4070. This conflicts with NVIDIA’s claims in CES 2025 that RTX 5070 would be equivalent to RTX 4090 in terms of performance – in performance – in particular, elevations of RTX 5080 and 5070 Ti on The previous generation GPUs were not significant enough to fully corroborate the other claims of the Green team.
The RTX 4070 is a significantly lower GPU compared to the RTX 4090, so that the statements of the performance of the RTX 5070 have been eccentric, to say the least (even considering the multi-trame multi-trame generation function of DLSS 4 ). In terms of direct comparison with its predecessor, the uprising (so legitimate) could be reasonable – WCCFTECH highlighted the RTX 5070 score of 187,414 in a Vulkan (a graphic API used in most AAA games) benchmark compared to RTX 4070 156 601 points AAA).
Fortunately, the reports suggest that the RTX 5070 will probably not face the same stock and food problems with the Blackwell GPUs already launched. If the prices are not inflated and find themselves well above the PDSF (as they did with the RTX 5090 lighthouse), this could be a solid upgrade of the GPU – do not expect RTX 4090 performance .
Is MFG a good reason for an upgrade?
The elevation of generational performance suggested in Vulkan for the RTX 5070 seems decent, but the multi-frame generation of Team Green (MFG) has the potential to take up a butt. I am well aware of the criticisms surrounding the weft generation software (“false frames”, I know), but as ghosts are considerably reduced with the new model, it is an addition that should not be ignored.
DLSS 4 improvements for all GPU RTX users are enough to suggest you stick to your current GPU (if compatible) – the DLSS 4 super -resolution performance mode in particular seems better if it is not Equivalent to the quality mode of DLSS 3 in games, and you can always enjoy a regular image frequency.
If you already have a GPU in the RTX 4000 series (which has the regular framework generation of DLSS 3, not MFG), you would probably be better there – it has also been revealed that some Blackwell GPUs ship with missing ROPs , a disadvantage I ‘D I certainly want to avoid.
However, if you are still on a GPU in the RTX 3000 series, an upgrade to an RTX 5070 seems sufficiently reasonable according to these reference leaks. Its launch is fast approaching, and I hope there are no major problems this time.