You’ll get the best answer if we match a card to how you actually use your PC, so I’ll give you quick, concrete picks plus a simple “how to choose” checklist.

TL;DR picks by use case

These are 2025–2026–era cards people keep recommending for different budgets and resolutions:

  • 1080p gaming (high/ultra, high FPS)
    • Nvidia RTX 4060 / 5060
    • AMD RX 7600 / RX 8600 equivalent, Intel Arc B580 on a tight budget
  • 1440p gaming (sweet spot for most people)
    • Nvidia RTX 4060 Ti / 4070 Super / 5060 Ti / 5070
    • AMD RX 7800 XT / RX 9060 XT / 9070
  • 4K or high‑end 1440p with ray tracing
    • Nvidia RTX 4070 Super / 4080 Super / 5070 Ti / 5080
    • AMD RX 7900 XT / RX 9070 XT
  • “No‑compromise” 4K, heavy creative work, AI stuff
    • Nvidia RTX 4090 / 5090 (very expensive, but the top dogs)

If you tell me:

  • Your monitor resolution and refresh rate (e.g., 1080p 144 Hz, 1440p 165 Hz, 4K 120 Hz)
  • Your budget
  • Your current CPU and power supply

I can give you a very specific “buy X or Y” answer.

Handy performance “tiers”

Think of cards in tiers tied to resolution and settings, rather than model numbers alone:

  1. 1080p high / ultra
    • Aim for something like RTX 4060 / 5060, RX 7600–class, or Intel Arc B580.
    • Great for esports (Valorant, CS2, Fortnite) and AAA on mostly high settings.
  2. 1440p high / ultra (where most gamers should be)
    • RTX 4060 Ti / 4070 Super / 5060 Ti / 5070, or AMD RX 7800 XT / 9060 XT / 9070.
    • Good mix of price, performance, and future‑proofing.
  3. 4K high / ultra
    • RTX 4070 Super / 4080 Super / 5070 Ti / 5080, or RX 7900 XT / 9070 XT.
    • You’ll often use DLSS/FSR upscaling for best frame rates.
  4. “Enthusiast” / 4K max + heavy RT
    • RTX 4090 / 5090 are the “money no object” options that dominate benchmarks.
 * Overkill for 1080p and even many 1440p setups.

Simple decision checklist

Use this like a mini buyers‑guide you’d see in a forum sticky:

  1. Define your target
    • What matters most: resolution, refresh rate, or eye‑candy (ray tracing)?
    • Example: “1440p, 144 Hz, ray tracing okay but not mandatory.”
  2. Pick a tier
    • Match your target to one of the 4 tiers above.
    • That decides roughly what class of GPU you need.
  3. Check your platform
    • Make sure your power supply (wattage and PCIe cables), case size, and motherboard can handle the card.
    • High‑end cards like RTX 4090/5090 need strong PSUs and plenty of space.
  1. Mind VRAM
    • For modern AAA games:
      • 1080p: 8–12 GB is okay.
      • 1440p: 12–16 GB ideal.
      • 4K: 16 GB+ strongly preferred.
  1. Look at features
    • Nvidia: DLSS (upscaling + frame generation), generally better ray tracing, stronger AI/creative support.
    • AMD: Often better price‑to‑performance, FSR upscaling works on more hardware, strong raw raster performance.
 * Intel Arc: Good budget 1080p options if drivers work well for your games.
  1. Sanity‑check with recent reviews
    • Look at a couple of recent benchmarks at your resolution and favorite games; don’t rely on old charts because new generations shift value.

Nvidia vs AMD vs Intel in 2026 (quick view)

Here’s a rough snapshot of how the current crop compares, focusing on gaming:

[9][1][3][5] [6][8][3][5] [4][8]
Brand Where it shines Typical sweet-spot cards Good if you care about…
Nvidia Ray tracing, DLSS, top-end 4K RTX 4060/4070 Super/5070 Ti/5080/5090 RT quality, AI features, high-end 4K
AMD Price-to-performance, 1440p & 4K raster RX 7800 XT, 7900 XT, 9060 XT, 9070, 9070 XT Best FPS per dollar, VRAM capacity
Intel Arc Budget 1080p Arc B570, B580 Cheapest “new” GPU with modern features

Example “build stories”

A couple of quick scenarios so you can map yourself to one:

“I play Apex, Valorant and Fortnite on a 1080p 144 Hz monitor, budget is tight.”

  • Aim: high FPS at 1080p, not maxed settings.
  • Card tier: 1080p high.
  • Likely picks: RTX 4060 / 5060, RX 7600‑class, or Arc B580 if you’re okay tweaking drivers.

“I want a long‑lasting 1440p setup for big single‑player AAA games.”

  • Aim: 1440p ultra, with upscaling where needed, and some ray tracing.
  • Card tier: 1440p/entry‑4K.
  • Good picks: RTX 4070 Super / 5070 Ti or RX 9060 XT / 9070 / 9070 XT depending on deals.

“I just bought a 4K OLED and want it to last years.”

  • Aim: 4K ultra, lots of ray tracing, DLSS/FSR on.
  • Card tier: 4K / enthusiast.
  • Picks: RTX 5080/5090 if you want “top shelf”; RX 9070 XT or RTX 5070 Ti/5080 if you want strong but not insane pricing.

If you reply with your:

  • Budget (currency and rough amount),
  • Monitor resolution/refresh,
  • Current CPU and PSU,

I can narrow this down to 1–2 exact models and even suggest “buy this specific tier and don’t worry about the rest.”