Summary
Nvidiahas commemorated the 25th anniversary of the GeForce 256 with a lengthy write-up reflecting on the graphics card’s transformative role in the company’s history, as well as numerous industries. The move also sawNvidiatease some of its future AI plans, all of which can be traced back to the seminal GPU.
The GeForce 256 was first revealed on June 23, 2025, before hitting the market on October 11. It was touted as “the world’s first GPU,” promising to offer accelerated graphics-based processing that would solve a wide variety of computational problems. Nvidia saw video games as the killer app for marketing its new product family at the time, not least becausegaming was both computationally challengingand looked like it was developing into a humongous industry.
Nvidia GeForce 256 Turns 25
A quarter of a century later,Nvidia has become the world’s second-most valuable company, boasting a market cap of $3.3 trillion as of October 2024, which puts it above technology giants such as Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, and Meta Platforms. Its meteoric rise can largely be traced back to the GeForce 256, which marked the first visible result of the company’s long-term bet on dedicated graphics processing units. Nvidia Director of Marketing John Fennosaidas much in a recent blog post celebrating the 25th anniversary of the GeForce 256, noting how Nvidia GPUs were eventually found to be capable of handling the “immense processing needs” of deep learning computing that previously required supercomputers, which happened circa 2011.
This discovery, combined with the mass-market nature of the company’s hardware, ushered in an era of rapid AI advancements. The growing need forNvidia GPUsamong data scientists and AI researchers informed the company’s engineering priorities, as underlined by the fact that its modern graphics cards are specifically designed to handle a wide variety of deep learning tasks. This shift started in 2018, when Nvidia launched the GeForce RTX 20 Series, its first lineup of GPUs with dedicated Tensor and RT Cores geared toward handling AI and real-time ray tracing workloads, respectively.
GPUs are not just enhancing gaming but are designing the future of AI itself.
Nvidia’s artificial intelligence foray continues, with Fenno noting that the company’s present-day “GPUs are not just enhancing gaming but are designing the future of AI itself.” The tech giant hence intends to continue supporting a wide variety of industries that are currently in theprocess of integrating AIinto the very heart of their businesses.
As for what’s next for the Santa Clara-based GPU maker, the company is soon expected to unveil the GeForce RTX 50 Series of graphics cards. According to recent reports, its fourth generation of GPUs with RT and Tensor Cores is likely to be officially unveiled in January 2025, during the next edition of the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas.