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Best of CES 2025: Performance and Productivity

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CES marks the beginning of a new year in tech, a time to see new products that make us excited about what’s to come in the 12 months ahead. Every January, we make the trek to Las Vegas with one goal: find and report on the most interesting, innovative and downright promising computers, components and peripherals.

This year’s show is an embarrassment of high-performance riches, with new high-end graphics cards announced by Nvidia and its partners, along with a first-of-its-kind AI workstation. But even more appealing are the products that allow humans to overclock their own abilities and experiences. These include a monitor that helps you keep track of your schedule / PC performance, a multicolor 3D printer and a laptop with a screen that expands to help you get more work done.

These are the 16 best products of CES 2025.CES marks the beginning of a new year in tech, a time to see new products that make us excited about what’s to come in the 12 months ahead. Every January, we make the trek to Las Vegas with one goal: find and report on the most interesting, innovative and downright promising computers, components and peripherals.

This year’s show is an embarrassment of high-performance riches, with new high-end graphics cards announced by Nvidia and its partners, along with a first-of-its-kind AI workstation. But even more appealing are the products that allow humans to overclock their own abilities and experiences. These include a monitor that helps you keep track of your schedule / PC performance, a multicolor 3D printer and a laptop with a screen that expands to help you get more work done.

These are the 16 best products of CES 2025.

Best Graphics Card: Asus ROG Astral RTX 5090 32GB OC

Asus ROG Astral RTX 5090 32GB OC

(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

 Nvidia pulled the wraps off its RTX 50-series Blackwell graphics cards, with the 5090 starting at $1,999, 5080 at $999, 5070 Ti at $749, and 5070 at $549. All of the new GPUs look to offer new features, higher performance, and improved image quality — with AI playing a key role in all those areas. But the card we’re most excited to see is the RTX 5090, and the Asus ROG Astral represents the top of the product stack.

While Nvidia has a Founders Edition 5090 coming in a dual-slot, dual-fan package, we’re concerned about how hot that might end up getting in typical use. It’s the same size as the old RTX 3080 Ti Founders Edition, more or less, a card that ran loud and hot with only a 350W TGP. 575W for the 5090 will need a lot of cooling, and maybe Nvidia’s design with liquid metal will surprise us, but the safer bet will be a chunky card like the Astral OC.

It comes with four fans, three on the front and one on the back. Coupled with a big triple-slot cooler and a factory overclock, it should deliver some of the best out of the box performance we’ll see from the coming generation. And the RTX 5090 looks to be a beast, with 170 Streaming Multiprocessors, 21,760 CUDA cores, 32GB of GDDR7 memory, and 1.8 TB/s of bandwidth. Oh, and it has x16 PCIe 5.0 support.

For workloads that are GPU limited, we anticipate the RTX 5090 will deliver at least a 25–30 percent boost in performance relative to the prior generation RTX 4090. For AI tasks and games that leverage the new features of the Blackwell architecture, it could be up to twice as fast. We’ll have a full review when the product launches later this month.

Read More: Nvidia announces RTX 5090 at $1,999

—Jarred Walton

Best CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D

AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D 

(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

AMD’s 16-core 32-thread Ryzen 9 9950X3D takes the company’s latest leading-edge technology to a new performance tier in productivity applications while still delivering among the best gaming performance on the market. AMD’s game-boosting 3D V-Cache technology, which uses an L3 cache chiplet to boost gaming performance, has left the company alone at the top of the gaming charts, easily beating Intel’s competing processors.

The X3D chips are so popular that the current best CPU for gaming, the Ryzen 9 9800X3D, remains almost impossible to find at retail. We expect a fresh supply of Ryzen 9 9950X3D chips to help alleviate some of those concerns, especially because AMD says it lands within one percent of the 9800X3D’s gaming performance. Naturally, it will come at a higher price point because it has more cores, but AMD will find no shortage of enthusiasts searching for the best of the best.

AMD released the Ryzen 9 9800X3D late last year with a new spin on the company’s cache tech — AMD now places the cache chiplet under the die instead of on top, thus providing more thermal headroom so the processor can deliver higher performance than the prior-gen models. Paired with the Zen 5 microarchitecture and the TSMC 4nm node, the new design delivers outstanding gaming performance. 

However, the X3D chips still have limitations that prevent them from providing the same level of performance in heavily-threaded work as standard ‘non-X3D’ processors. That’s where the 9950X3D’s extra cores, paired with the addition of a second die that lacks a cache chiplet so it can operate at higher clock rates, step in. The 9950X3D won’t match similar 16-core AMD chips that don’t have the extra cache chiplet, but this design will provide enough performance in heavily-threaded applications for all but the most demanding users.

The 9950X3D chips will launch in the first quarter of this year, but AMD hasn’t announced pricing yet. Intel remains entirely incapable of matching the X3D chips in gaming in any price range, so AMD will continue to dominate the gaming market throughout 2025.

Read More: AMD launches Ryzen 9 9950X3D and 9900X3D, claims 20% faster gaming performance than Intel’s flagship Arrow Lake processors

Paul Alcorn 

Best Gaming Monitor: HP Omen 32x

HP Omen 32x smart gaming monitor

(Image credit: HP)

Lots of companies are bumping up their refresh rates, contrast ratios, or other specs here at CES 2025, but HP has gone in a different direction to deliver a monitor that is truly innovative and — at least to me as someone who’s used TVs as monitors for more than a decade — something deeply appealing. The 31.5-inch, 144 Hz Omen 32x is HP’s first monitor to include Google TV for all your streaming needs.

But as much as a gaming monitor that does double-duty as a compact streaming TV is appealing, you could always just buy a small TV and use it as a monitor or vice versa. What makes the Omen 32x stand out is that it’s designed to do both from the ground up, and HP has incorporated some extremely slick picture-by-picture setups where you can, say, easily stream a YouTube tutorial from your phone alongside a game, or catch up on your favorite TV show while you grind away in an MMORPG.

You could do some of that with a TV by fumbling clumsily with a remote, but HP’s software makes it look simple to jump between inputs and screen layouts, in a way that appealed to my multitasking / procrastinating brain like nothing else here at CES 2025. I wish the company had opted for an OLED screen rather than IPS. And I’d love to see a larger size (say, 42 or even 48 inches) to make the device as appealing as a TV as it is as a monitor, but there’s always next year.  

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