Nvidia CES 2025 keynote live: new GPUs or there'll be a riot
Watch with me as Jen-Hsun presumably announces the new RTX 50-series Blackwell cards, or pulls off the biggest GPU bait-and-switch in history.
Catch up with CES 2025: We're on the ground in sunny Las Vegas covering all the latest announcements from some of the biggest names in tech, including Nvidia, AMD, Intel, Asus, Razer, MSI and more.
For PC gamers, this is going to be CES 2025's 'big one', the keynote that is going to deliver what we've all been waiting for: Nvidia's new RTX 50-series Blackwell graphics card announcement.
And I'm here, in-person, braving the queues, and the jet-lag, and the crowds, and the interminable waiting, to bring you our first experience of the new cards as I sit here in the Michelob Ultra Arena.
And for most of it I'll probably be bored out of my tiny mind as we wade through more server announcements, more Blackwell enterprise stuff, and 'the more you buy, the more you save' quips from Jen-Hsun.
But hey, at least we'll get new cards announced at the end of it. And maybe new upscaling tech and laptop chips, too.
See, exciting.
Nvidia CES 2025 live blog
I've already been queuing for half an hour and it's still nearly two hours until it kicks off. I don't even know how far along this press line I am...
I'm already tired. Someone send me a Redbull...
(other energy drinks are available)
The doors have now opened, and we're slowly plodding in towards the arena now. And the 4G network is taking a pounding so who knows if this update is even going to get saved at this point...
So glad I swiped some water from backstage at the AMD keynote... the constant air-con is drying me up inside and out.
What do you think are the odds that we'll actually get pricing tonight? Given it's often the most contentious part of a new GPU launch, and also the part that is regularly the last to be cemented in place, I'm going to bet we don't.
I reckon it'll be a few specs, such as VRAM and maybe some shaders, and then a launch date.
It's a long road...
Because Jen-Hsun doesn't like beach balls. Hates 'em. It was in that book and everything.
Aaaaand... I'm in.
I was told by an Nvidia rep that the Michelob Ultra Arena was just going to be playing Bill WIthers' 'Lovely Day' on loop for the next hour or so. But it's waaay worse.
Starting to fill up nicely in here now.
What sort of AI generated video/musical accompaniment are we going to get treated with to kick this thing off, then?
Uh-oh. Ten minute delay has just been announced. Where's Jen-Hsun?
Here we go...
Nuh-vidia, hey?
So, we all just got Rick-rolled, then.
Now, that's a shiny jacket...
Yes, obviously we are going to have to sit through a ton of AI chat tonight, but just bear with us, I'm sure we'll get to the GPU good-stuff eventually. It's just the price we have to pay for new graphics cards, right?
"GeForce enabled AI to reach the masses, and now AI is coming home to GeForce."
RTX Blackwell, eh? So, is that how they're going to differentiate between the consumer and commercial versions of Blackwell?
The latest generation of DLSS can "predict the future."
Computing 2 million pixels and infer the rest to get to 33 million pixels, with three frames generated by AI for every one that's been computed.
"The GPU's just a beast."
Okay, the pretty astounding thing is just how small Nvidia gets its PCBs that small in its Founders Edition cards.
RTX 5070 for just $549, giving RTX 4090 performance. Dang
So, all those rumours of massive price hikes, was a bit of a stretch then. Okay, the RTX 5090 is now $1,999 instead of $1,599, but I guess that kinda works. Thankfully the RTX 5080 is remaining at the same $999 price point as the RTX 4080 Super, and it really had to after back-tracking on the initial pricing of the RTX 4080 at launch.
Interesting that we are getting that RTX 5070 Ti in the first tranche of GPU releases, so we're getting a full four card drop in January... well, that's if they all release in the same month.