picsfemdom

picsfemdom

The curious tale of the missing eight_ Some Nvidia RTX 50-series cards are shipping with missing ROP

By Dr. Eleanor Vance | Published on December 08, 2025

Nvidia's latest gaming GPU, the RTX 50-series, hasn't enjoyed a flawless launch. With high prices, low stock, and concerns over melting connectors, black screens, and unstable cards, it's transpired over the weekend that there is one more thing to fret about: does your GPU have its full complement of ROPs?

The discovery of the missing ROPs was first reported by , which relayed a post by one of its forum users. That person noticed their new showed it only had 168 ROPs instead of 176. TechPowerUp then checked one of its 5090 cards and discovered the same issue and it also happened to be a card that performed slightly worse than other models when tested.

If you have recently picked up a Blackwell GPU, and it's not showing the right ROP count, then you have one of two options: Request an RMA from the card's manufacturer or accept the performance loss and keep the card.

How to check your graphics card's ROPs

A screenshot of TechPowerUp's GPU-z software tool, with the GPU's ROP count highlighted

(Image credit: TechPowerUp)

If you're wondering exactly how to check the ROP count in your graphics cards, the easiest way to do this is to use . This tool directly polls hardware information from the GPU itself, so the information will be 100% correct.

Download the tool, install or run it directly, and then let is start up to its default tab—this shows [[link]] all of the hardware specifications [[link]] of the GPU in your graphics card. If you have several GPUs in your gaming PC, you might need to select the right one in the drop-down menu at the bottom of GPU-z.

In the image above, the ROP count has been highlighted and as you can see, our RTX 5090 sample has the correct number of ROPs:

  • RTX 5090 = 176 ROPs
  • RTX 5080 = 112 ROPs
  • RTX 5070 Ti = 96 ROPs

If you do keep the card, how much of a performance loss you'll need to put up with will depend entirely on where a game's performance is most limited within a GPU. If it absolutely hammers the use of async shaders, then eight missing ROPs won't be missed. However, the less compute-based a game is then the more likely there's going to be a noticeable performance hit.

A block diagram of Nvidia's RTX Blackwell architecture, highlighting the structure of the GPC

Blackwell's ROP partitions are at the bottom of the GPC, in this diagram. (Image credit: Nvidia)

In terms of final raster operations performance, an RTX 5090 with eight missing ROPs will be 4.5% slower, whereas an equivalent and Ti will be 7% and 8.3% slower respectively. However, if there's a lot of blending taking place, the performance drop could be lower still.

I must admit that this is the oddest GPU manufacturing error I've seen in a long, long time. Nvidia doesn't disable ROP partitions for its different graphics card SKUs—it either uses all of the GPCs (and therefore all of the ROPs) in the chip, and just disables blocks of shader cores here and there, or it deactivates an entire GPC.

Your next upgrade

Nvidia RTX 5090 Founders Edition graphics card on different backgrounds

(Image credit: Future)

: The top chips from Intel and AMD.
: The right boards.
: Your perfect pixel-pusher awaits.
: Get into the game ahead of the rest.

That means there should be no mechanism or procedure by which a ROP partition can be disabled. The fact that this has clearly happened though just makes me wonder how such a thing could happen in the first place. There's also a question as to why Nvidia isn't polling for correct hardware figures on every GPU it sells. After all, each one is checked during the packaging process to ensure that it works correctly.

Graphics card manufacturers do test their products to ensure they're fully functional before shipping them out but the tests are clearly not comprehensive enough. And they do need to be better because (a) these cards are very expensive and (b) the current supply cannot keep up with demand. If you have an RTX 50-series card with missing ROPs and you [[link]] return it to the vendor, you might not get an immediate replacement.

Assuming Nvidia's figure of 0.5% is correct, then it's essentially just rotten luck to spend a huge chunk of money on a GPU, only to find that it isn't fully working, but rotten luck seems to be Blackwell's theme at the moment. Let's hope the rest of the RTX 50-series launch is trouble-free.

Reader Comments

GameTiger674

The bonuses are nice and offer great value, although they could be a bit more frequent. I love being part of the VIP program, which gives me extra rewards and makes me feel appreciated as a loyal player.

LuckyBear184

The deposit process is smooth and fast. I was able to fund my account instantly and start playing without any hassle. Plus, the multiple payment options make it convenient for everyone regardless of location.

BetKing80

Customer support responded incredibly fast when I had an issue with my account. They were polite, professional, and solved my problem within minutes. It's reassuring to know that help is always available when needed.

Recommended Reading

Itch.io's new Games for Gaza bundle is raising funds for medical care for Palestinians

Abstract: Itch.io has put together a new bundle of more than 250 games to raise funds in support of Medical Aid for Palestinians, a UK-based charity founded [[link]] in 1982 that "works in partnership with Palestinian c...

The next Magic set's biomechanical nightmare was inspired by classical depictions of Hell

Abstract: In Magic: The Gathering, the Phyrexians are the kind of villains who don't want to kill you because they'd rather remake you. Sure, the remaking process might kill you, but that's not [[link]] the point of it....

Starfield needs a spaceship sharing feature, stat

Abstract: It's barely been a week since players first got their hands on Starfield and the internet is already flooded with awesome custom Starfield spaceship builds. We've seen the [[link]] Hallway Ship (it's very long...