NVIDIA RTX 4090 D ‘Dragon’ to Beat US Sanctions in China Reportedly Coming

All the hardware enthusiasts and high-end PC gamers in China can breathe a heavy sigh of relief! A new report indicates that Nvidia might be looking forward to launching aslightly nerfedversion of its flagship GPU RTX 4090, which was banned in China.

Why did US sanctions affect RTX 4090 availability in China? You see, the RTX 4090 isquite powerfulandcan be used for AI computing. Biden-led US government does not want several countries (including China) to prosper in terms of AI innovation.

So, a gaminggraphics cardis banned in China because it’s too powerful. Looks like Nvidia has a trick up its sleeves to solve this problem. A new report via tech media outletWCCFTechclaims that Nvidia is bringing back its flagship gaming GPU to China!As we mentioned, this new GPU is expected to be anerfedversionand fully comply with US Sanctions.

It could be called Nvidia Geforce RTX 4090 D, with the D standing for ‘Dragon,’as mentioned in the report. This label will be clearly mentioned in the new retail boxes. This will be aChina-exclusive GPUand not come with any price cuts – it is expected to come at12,999 CN¥, which is equivalent to ~$1834 in the US. By the way, RTX 4090 launched at $1599 MSRP last year, and the US market is seeing prices as high as $2000 (as an aftermath of the sanctions). The existing AIB brand partners (such as Colorful, Asus, etc.) are reportedly going to sell this new Nvidia RTX 4090 D ‘Dragon’ GPU.

The report mentions that Nvidia’s upcomingRTX 4090 Dis targeting theconsumer segmentandnot the AI space. Let’s talk aboutperformancenow. Sadly, we could be seeinglower performanceon the new RTX 4090 variant for China due to the AI computing curbing. But the VRAM advantages willhopefullystill hold true. The RTX 4090 boasts an impressive amount of 24GB GDDR6X video memory.

The RTX 4090 D launching for China (exclusively) basically needs to have a lower number when considering itsTotal Processing Performance (TPP). This is a metric that the US government is using to determine whether or not a graphics card is allowed for export to China. Hopefully, we will hear some official news on this matter soon. For now, take things with a grain of salt, as things could change.

However, hardware leaker on X (formerly Twitter), known as@MEGAsizeGPUdid comment on this topic recently. He mentioned the internal GPU processor expected to be used in the new China-exclusive RTX 4090 D ‘Dragon.’ Moreover, this X user also replied to a post asking about this GPU’s specs. He said that the detailed specifications of RTX 4090 D havenot beenconfirmed yet.4090DAD102-250— MEGAsizeGPU (@Zed__Wang)November 30, 2023

4090DAD102-250— MEGAsizeGPU (@Zed__Wang)November 30, 2023

What doesAD102-250mean here? The original Nvidia GeForce RTX 4090 GPU internally uses theAD102-300 chip. The RTX 4080, on the other hand, uses theAD103-300chip. Essentially, the internal GPU chip of RTX 4090 D will be somewhat different (lower) to be under the US sanction requirements for a ‘legal GPU’ that can be exported to China.

How much of a performance hit do you think Nvidia’s China-exclusive RTX 4080 D ‘Dragon’ will receive? Doesn’t this remind you of the mining craze back when Nvidia released LHR variants to ensure gamers can actually buy a decent graphics card without miners buying them all? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below.

Satyam Kumar

Highly passionate about technology. Major expertise in PC hardware, the VR industry, esports-centric gear, and other gadgets. In my spare time, I’m usually researching exciting hardware breakthroughs or playing competitive games.

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