Nvidia launches a brand new kind of ‘card’ that anybody can afford
Abstract created by Good Solutions AI
In abstract:
- PCWorld experiences that Nvidia launched GeForce Buying and selling Playing cards: Sequence 1, that includes 14 collectible playing cards celebrating iconic graphics playing cards and video games like Unreal Event 2004.
- These free promotional objects commemorate PC gaming historical past by way of traditional tech demos and historic GPUs together with NV1, GeForce 256, and GeForce 3.
- The playing cards are distributed by way of Nvidia’s Summer season of RTX marketing campaign through social media and gaming occasions like Gamescom 2026.
Nvidia simply unveiled its “GeForce Buying and selling Playing cards: Sequence 1,” a free collection of collectable playing cards celebrating the corporate’s historical past in PC gaming. The collection contains 14 completely different playing cards that includes paintings and designs from historic graphics playing cards, traditional tech demos, and iconic video games which have formed the GeForce model over the many years.
The playing cards embrace the NV1 from 1995, the GeForce 256 from 1999, the GeForce 3 from 2001, GeForce 7800 GTX from 2005, and GeForce GTX 1080 from 2016. The collection additionally options playing cards impressed by tech demos comparable to Bubble, Chameleon, and Medusa, and video games comparable to Unreal Event 2004 and Borderlands.
These collector playing cards are being given away freed from cost as a part of Nvidia’s “Summer season of RTX” marketing campaign through the corporate’s social media channels and at gaming conventions and occasions like Gamescom 2026. As such, these aren’t precise, usable buying and selling playing cards.
Based on Nvidia, the intention is to have fun the graphics playing cards and video games which have formed generations of PC players. An added bonus is that though the worldwide reminiscence scarcity has pushed up the costs of graphics playing cards, the GeForce Buying and selling Playing cards: Sequence 1 playing cards are a sort of Nvidia card that everybody can afford—though that may not be the case as soon as they hit the second-hand market.
This text initially appeared on our sister publication PC för Alla and was translated and localized from Swedish.

