Regardless of whether or not I'm in agreement with the central argument, this is one of the single most terribly written tech articles I've seen since "Just buy it". This piece has the organization and writing quality of a high schooler's book report, with a logical thought process to match.
As many others have rightly pointed out, you have an RTX 2060 Mobile, which is the single lowest end RTX card in existence, bar maybe the RTX 2060 Max-Q. The thing has just over a third the performance in both rasterization and raytracing heavy games and benchmarks than even the last-gen 2080 ti. Now, your experiences with this GPU aren't invalid - there's a good argument to be made here that Nvidia never should have released it as an RTX-enabled card. But to then go and spin that into "No RTX cards are powerful enough, because mine isn't"? That's garbage.
Here's an idea - go get some experience with actual RTX 3000 cards, or even maybe just look up some benchmarks, before drawing conclusions about them.
Your second point goes so far out of the way of the main idea of this article that frankly I'm not sure why it's there. Your entire argument is "current-gen RTX cards are not powerful enough to run RTX", so why would you then go and put an entire paragraph talking about how current-gen RTX titles look bad? What does that have to do with anything? There are lots of issues with the way that paragraph was written too, but I'll choose to ignore them since, like I said, that paragraph is irrelevant.
And the third point - now this just has me confused. See, I can interpret this "efficiency gains" in two ways. One is "The RTX 3000 series only provides modest gains in RTX performance." The other is "The RTX 3000 series only provides modest gains in performance per watt".
If it's the former, then that's absolutely just not true. The RTX 3080 is nearly 50% more powerful in both Port Royal and the 3DMark DXR test than the 2080 ti - that's huge. Nvidia put a huge focus on RTX performance this generation, and that clearly shows.
I don't know what you would have expected - should the 3000 series have been 300% faster? 1000%? What's your cutoff for no longer being "modest gains"?
If it's the latter, then yes - the RTX 3000 series have worryingly high power consumption, and as a result overall performance per watt hasn't gone up much. But why is that relevant to performance? You're arguing here that the RTX 3000 series cards are not powerful enough, not that they're not efficient enough. The fact that the 3080 draws 350W isn't going to stop it from running games 3 years into the future.
And speaking of which - that's the last thing for today that I take issue with. "[The RTX 3000-series GPUs] offer neither enough rasterisation performance nor enough RTX performance to run very demanding ray-tracing-focused titles of the next 3 to 5 years."
You're absolutely right. The RTX 3000 series won't be enough to max a 2024 RTX game.
Hey, remind me again, can the GTX 980 max Valhalla at 1440p? What about RDR2? How about Far Cry 5?
But those are all pure rasterization titles!
Face it - it's never been the case that a 3-5 year old GPU can comfortably max all curreng-gen titles. You turn down some settings and continue on with your life. That's going to be the case for the 3080 as well - you might get used to RTX Ultra right now, but in 5 years you'll have to turn that down to RTX Medium or Low, and reduce a bunch of other graphics settings as well. That's just the way things are.
And that's why the premise of this article makes no sense. "what I do not believe is that Nvidia's RTX 3000-series GPUs will be a meaningful part of that future". You're right - once the RTX 4000 series are released, the 3000 series will be obsolete. 5000 series will make 4000 series obsolete. And so on, and so forth. We don't stick in this game of PC hardware for what current-gen hardware has to offer us 5 years into the future, expecting that it will always remain the latest and greatest - we're concerned about what it offers us now.
This article is poorly thought out, poorly structured, and poorly written, and does not reflect the standard of writing I'd expect from Notebookcheck. Even with "Views, thoughts, and opinions expressed in the text belong solely to the author," it does no favors for Notebookcheck's credibility that an article such as this one is allowed to be published.