MSI Suprim Review

The MSI Suprim RTX 5090 is built to drive 8K displays, not to win performance benchmarks. At $3900, it's a niche tool for a specific need.

Resolution 7680 x 4320
Hdr HDR
MSI Suprim monitor
46.4 Overall Score

The 30-Second Version

The MSI Suprim RTX 5090 is a display specialist with best-in-class connectivity, but its overall performance score is weak. It's cool and future-proofed, but at $3900, only buy it if you need to power multiple 8K monitors right now.

Overview

The MSI Suprim RTX 5090 is a monster of a graphics card. It's built for pushing pixels to the absolute limit, with specs like 32GB of GDDR7 memory and PCI Express 5.0 that scream 'future-proof'. But this isn't a general-purpose card. It's a specialist tool, and its performance scores in our database tell a very specific story.

Performance

Let's be clear: this card is designed for one thing, and it's not office work. Its percentile ranking for performance is disappointing, sitting in the 21st percentile. That means it lags behind most other products in its category for general performance scoring. However, that score is misleading because it's averaging across all use cases. For the specific task of driving massive, high-resolution displays—like the 8K monitors it's paired with here—it has the raw horsepower. The liquid cooling keeps temps low, idling around 30C and hitting only 50C during gaming, which is impressive.

Performance Percentiles

Color 60
Portability 50.4
Display 99.9
Feature 82.4
Ergonomic 27.8
Performance 22.5
Connectivity 96.3
Social Proof 56.3

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Unmatched connectivity for high-end displays with four 2.1b ports. 100th
  • Massive 32GB GDDR7 memory for future-proofing and heavy workloads. 96th
  • Excellent thermal control with the liquid cooling solution. 82th
  • Top-tier build quality and features from the MSI Suprim line.

Cons

  • General performance score is surprisingly weak for the price. 23th
  • It's a massive, expensive specialist card with limited appeal. 28th
  • The 'office' use case score is one of the worst we've seen.
  • You're paying for potential future use, not current value.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Display

Resolution 7680 x 4320

Color & HDR

HDR HDR
HDR Support HDR

Connectivity

HDMI Ports 1
DisplayPort 3

Value & Pricing

At $3900, the value proposition is tough. You're not buying the best-performing card today, according to our aggregate data. You're buying a flagship with top-of-the-charts display support and connectivity, hoping that its 32GB of memory and PCIe 5.0 will pay off down the line. For most people, that's a bad bet. For a very specific few who need to drive multiple 8K screens right now, it might be the only option.

CA$6,421

vs Competition

Looking at the top competitors, they're all monitors, which tells you exactly what this card's job is. Compared to something like an ASUS ROG Swift 4K 240Hz monitor, this card can push it easily. But if you're comparing it to other flagship GPUs for gaming or creative work, its overall performance percentile is a red flag. It trades raw, balanced performance for extreme display output capability. The Samsung Odyssey Neo G9 or LG UltraGear 45" are the kinds of displays this card wants to power, but other GPUs might handle those tasks more efficiently for less money.

Spec MSI Suprim Samsung Odyssey Neo Samsung - 57" Odyssey Neo G9 Dual 4K UHD Quantum LG UltraGear LG UltraGear 45" WUHD DUAL MODE 4K 165Hz FHD 330Hz ASUS ROG Swift ASUS ROG Swift 32" 4K OLED Gaming Monitor PG32UCDP Apple Studio Display Apple - Studio Display - Standard glass - Dell UltraSharp Dell UltraSharp U3225QE 31.5" 4K HDR 120 Hz
Screen Size - 57 45 32 27 31.5
Resolution 7680 x 4320 7680 x 2160 5120 x 2160 3840 x 2160 5120 x 2880 3840 x 2160
Panel Type - VA OLED OLED IPS IPS
Refresh Rate - 240 165 240 60 120
Response Time Ms - 1 - - - 5
Adaptive Sync - FreeSync Premium Pro G-Sync Compatible G-Sync Compatible - -
Hdr HDR HDR10+ HDR10 HDR10 HDR
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product ColorCompactDisplayFeatureErgonomicPerformanceConnectivitySocial Proof
MSI Suprim 6050.499.982.427.822.596.356.3
Samsung Odyssey Neo G9 57" Dual Compare 99.450.499.682.487.896.399.499.3
LG UltraGear 45" Wuhd Dual Mode Compare 99.882.799.697.29370.298.199.3
ASUS ROG Swift 32" Compare 99.972.498.782.487.881.396.797.3
Apple Studio Display Studio Display Standard glass Tilt-adjustable stand Compare 96.780.499.499.672.322.59698.1
Dell UltraSharp Dual 31.5" Compare 97.672.490.582.487.858.397.290.6

Common Questions

Q: Does it really have DisplayPort 2.1b, or is it 2.1a?

Yes, it's 2.1b. NVIDIA's spec sheets confirm it, which means it supports the latest display standards for high bandwidth.

Q: How good is the temperature control with the liquid cooling?

It's excellent. Data shows it idles around 30°C and only hits about 50°C under gaming load, which is very cool for a card this powerful.

Q: Is this good for high-performance gaming?

It has the specs—like 21760 CUDA cores and a 2565 MHz boost clock—but our overall performance score suggests other cards might be better for pure gaming.

Who Should Skip This

If you're a gamer or a creator looking for the best all-around performance, skip this. Its percentile ranking is low, and you can get better results for less money. If you need a card for office work or general use, this is literally one of the worst choices in our database. Look elsewhere.

Verdict

Buy this only if you have a very specific, immediate need to drive multiple 8K or high-refresh-rate 4K monitors. It's a display engine, not a general gaming or creative powerhouse. If that's your setup, it's a capable, cool-running option. For everyone else—gamers, streamers, most creators—there are better-performing cards that will cost you significantly less.