NVIDIA has long held a dominant position in the PC graphics card market, significantly outperforming AMD in market share. Despite some criticism for the RTX 50 series, sales remained strong. Now, with the advent of DLSS 5, popular YouTuber Moore’s Law is Dead predicts it could deliver the “final blow” to AMD in PC gaming, potentially compelling developers to exclusively utilize NVIDIA’s technology.
Historically, NVIDIA attracted gamers due to its more stable drivers, whereas AMD’s drivers often presented issues. Before the RTX series, NVIDIA offered exclusive features like CUDA and PhysX. The introduction of RTX cards brought Tensor Cores, enabling real-time Ray Tracing and DLSS. While the first iteration of DLSS was underwhelming, DLSS 2 and subsequent versions marked significant quality improvements. AMD responded with FSR, which arrived later and was initially considered inferior, though FSR 4 has shown considerable progress. Nevertheless, NVIDIA continued its innovation with DLSS 4.5, and now, the controversial DLSS 5.
DLSS 5: A Game-Changer or Market Dominator?
Moore’s Law is Dead believes DLSS 5 poses an existential threat to AMD. Unlike FSR, which has improved in scaling to rival NVIDIA, DLSS 5 is fundamentally different. It’s not merely an AI filter; NVIDIA’s CEO Jensen Huang has indicated that it dynamically modifies geometry, details, and lighting in real-time, offering developers profound control. With NVIDIA fully embracing AI, and AMD still in the nascent stages of incorporating Machine Learning into FSR, the technological gap is vast.
The YouTuber draws a comparison between DLSS 5 and PhysX, a technology that enhanced graphics but mandated NVIDIA hardware. Despite not being an NVIDIA advocate, Moore’s Law is Dead criticizes DLSS 5 for shifting away from its original purpose of performance upscaling to become a tool for market domination. He suggests that, similar to PhysX, optimal DLSS 5 performance might require dedicated graphics hardware, even citing observations of a setup using two RTX 5090s (one for the game, one for DLSS 5). This scenario could inadvertently boost NVIDIA’s GPU sales.
While PhysX ultimately faded due to limited adoption, NVIDIA consistently pursues technological superiority. Moore’s Law is Dead warns that widespread developer adoption of DLSS 5 could signal the end for AMD in PC gaming. He urges AMD to chart its own course, focusing on improving GPU performance organically rather than relying on “AI-invented frames” or technologies like DLSS 5, which he perceives as akin to “real-time AI-generated video.”
