The ghost of multi-GPU gaming Scalable Link Interface, or SLI, once represented the absolute peak of enthusiast computing. The promise was simple: double the cards, double the performance. However, as Nvidia moved toward more complex rendering techniques, this brute-force approach crumbled. To see if there is any life left in this legacy tech, we paired two RTX 3090 Ti cards—the last consumer flagship to support NVLink—against the current titan, the RTX 5090. Brutal hardware with diminishing returns The RTX 3090 Ti remains a powerhouse with 10,752 CUDA cores and 24GB of VRAM. Doubling them creates a behemoth that pulls over 1,000 watts from the wall. While synthetic benchmarks like 3DMark show nearly double the graphics score, real-world gaming is a different story. The cards must coordinate constantly, leading to the infamous "micro-stutter." Even when frame rates look high on paper, the inconsistent delivery makes the experience feel sluggish and disjointed. The troubleshooting nightmare Modern gaming has largely abandoned SLI. To get this rig running, we had to hunt for obscure hex codes and compatibility bits in Nvidia Profile Inspector. Even then, the RTX 3090 Ti drivers now actively ignore profiles for DirectX 11 and older titles. We even found that the Steam overlay alone was enough to crash Shadow of the Tomb Raider when running in multi-GPU mode. It is a hobbyist’s project, not a practical gaming solution. Why the RTX 5090 takes the crown The RTX 5090 renders the dual-card dream obsolete. Despite having less total VRAM than the combined 48GB of two 3090 Tis, its 32GB of GDDR7 on a 512-bit bus offers 80% more usable bandwidth. Because SLI requires each card to mirror the same data in its frame buffer, you never actually get "double" the usable memory for gaming. The 5090 delivers superior performance with half the power draw and none of the thermal throttling that saw our secondary 3090 Ti hitting 90°C. Verdict: A relic for AI, not gaming Unless you are a home lab enthusiast training AI models—where NVLink still provides genuine memory pooling benefits—buying a second RTX 3090 Ti is a mistake. The RTX 5090 provides a smoother, more efficient, and more reliable experience. SLI looks incredible in a case, but its time in the sun has officially set.
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