ASUS GT730-SL-2GD5-BRK Review

The ASUS GT 730 is dead quiet and can drive three monitors, but its 2GB of VRAM is stone-age, and user reviews aren't kind—it's strictly a display adapter for the desperate.

RAM 2 GB
Screen ?" 3840x2160
GPU NVIDIA GeForce GT 730
OS OC: 927 MHzGaming: 902 MHz
ASUS GT730-SL-2GD5-BRK laptop
12.8 التقييم العام

The 30-Second Version

The GT 730's 2GB VRAM lands at the dead bottom of our database—0th percentile—and its 4K support tops out at a stuttery 30Hz. User sentiment is a rough 15th percentile, with common complaints about power supply demands and overheating. It's a niche card for silent HDMI outputs; for everyone else, integrated graphics are better and free.

Overview

The ASUS GT 730 is a quiet little card that punches way above its weight in one very specific area—display output. Its 4K support ranks in the 92nd percentile among GPUs in our database, which sounds impressive until you realize it's capped at a choppy 30Hz refresh rate. Still, for a dead-silent HTPC or a reliable multi-monitor office setup, that 4K headline grabber covers the basics. Look past the resolution number and you'll find specs that haven't aged well. With just 2GB of DDR5 VRAM (0th percentile), a pedestrian boost clock of 927 MHz, and a GPU score in the 38th percentile, this isn't a card for gaming or content creation. It's a display adapter with a fanless cooler, plain and simple.

Performance

Under the hood, the GT 730's 384 CUDA cores are running on a PCIe 2.0 bus, which is ancient by modern standards. Our database slots its raw GPU performance at the 38th percentile, meaning it's slower than 62% of all tested discrete and integrated solutions. In practical terms, you can forget about anything beyond 720p gaming or light photo editing—our best-for-gaming score of 16.5/100 essentially calls it a non-starter for modern titles. What it does well is stay cool and quiet while pushing pixels to up to three monitors at once. The passive heatsink works as advertised, and the 0dB rating is a boon for home theater PCs. Just don't expect it to accelerate 4K video beyond basic decoding; the lack of modern codec support and limited bandwidth can lead to stuttering with high-bitrate streams.

Performance Percentiles

CPU 30.8
GPU 38.5
RAM 0.2
Ports 13.4
Screen 92.3
Portability 36.9
Storage 1.3
User Sentiment 14.2
Reliability 57.9
Social Proof 56.6

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Silent 0dB cooling—perfect for HTPCs 92th
  • True 4K output (92nd percentile screen support)
  • Includes both low-profile and full-height brackets
  • Solid multi-monitor support (up to 3 screens)
  • Decent reliability at 57th percentile

Cons

  • 4K capped at 30Hz, making it a tease
  • 2GB VRAM is bottom of the barrel (0th percentile) 1th
  • GPU performance sits at a weak 38th percentile 13th
  • Sparse port selection (13th percentile for connectivity) 14th
  • User sentiment a disappointing 15th percentile

The Word on the Street

4.6/5 (20 reviews)
👍 Owners love the multi-monitor flexibility and the fact that it comes with both bracket types right out of the box.
👎 A frequent gripe is that the 4K output is locked to 30Hz, making it nearly unusable for smooth desktop work at that resolution.
🤔 Potential buyers ask about paint/draw programs, but ASUS confirms it's really meant for video watching, not color-critical work.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Graphics

GPU GeForce GT 730
Type discrete
VRAM 2 GB

Memory & Storage

RAM 2 GB
RAM Generation DDR5

Display

Resolution 3840 (4K UHD)

Connectivity

HDMI 1 x HDMI 1.4a

Physical

OS OC: 927 MHzGaming: 902 MHz

Value & Pricing

Pricing is all over the place—we've seen listings from $60 to a baffling $20,107 (likely a scalper's fever dream). At the $60 end, you're getting a simple video card for a budget silent build, which is fair. But for any more than that, you're overpaying for very old silicon. Our database shows integrated graphics in modern CPUs trounce this card, so unless you absolutely need an extra HDMI port on a legacy system, the value evaporates fast.

‏١٢٠ €

vs Competition

There aren't many direct competitors left in this ultra-budget, fanless niche, but modern integrated graphics are the real rival. Intel's UHD 620 or AMD's Vega 3 iGPU can match or beat the GT 730 in compute and media playback while sipping less power and adding zero cost. Against other budget cards like the GT 1030, the 730 falls behind by a mile—the 1030 scores roughly double the gaming performance. Basically, this card only makes sense if your CPU has no integrated graphics and you just want a silent HDMI output.

Spec ASUS GT730-SL-2GD5-BRK Lenovo ThinkPad T470 HP Stream Stream Dell Latitude E5470 Apple MacBook Pro 13.3" ZHAOHUIXIN PC1068
CPU - Intel Core i5-6300U 3.6 GHz others Intel Core i5 6th Intel Core i5-3210M Allwinner A133
RAM (GB) 2 8 4 8 4 2
Storage (GB) - 256 128 256 - 64
Screen ?" 3840x2160 14" 1920x1080 14" 1366x768 14" 1366x768 13.3" 1280x800 10.1" 1280x800
GPU NVIDIA GeForce GT 730 AMD Intel HD Graphics 520 Intel Graphics AMD Integrated Graphics AMD Graphics ARM Mali-400 MP2
OS OC: 927 MHzGaming: 902 MHz Windows 10 Pro 64-bit Windows 11 S Windows 10 Pro 64-bit - Android
Weight (kg) - 1.6 1.4 1.8 2 1.3
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product CpuGpuRamPortScreenCompactStorageUser SentimentReliabilitySocial Proof
ASUS GT730-SL-2GD5-BRK 30.838.50.213.492.336.91.314.257.956.6
Lenovo ThinkPad T470 Compare 15.196.614.133.621.471.517.907881.8
HP Stream Stream Compare 6.954.42.454.24.177.373.5031.591.3
Dell Latitude E5470 Compare 15.196.614.147.74.16917.9031.582
Apple MacBook Pro 13.3" Compare 30.896.62.44.41.9851.3095.90
ZHAOHUIXIN PC1068 Compare 1.318.30.129.56.799.74.56.33.484.4

Common Questions

Q: Can this card run 4K at 120Hz with a low-profile setup?

No. The HDMI 1.4a port maxes out at 4K@30Hz. Even with a display that supports 120Hz, you won't get past a sluggish 30 frames per second, which is a common letdown according to our data.

Q: What power supply do I need for this graphics card?

The card draws all its power from the PCIe slot, so a 300W PSU is a safe minimum. Owners running a 250W unit have reported overheating and stability concerns, and we'd recommend a bit more headroom to be safe.

Q: Is the GT 730 suitable for drawing tablets or Photoshop?

ASUS doesn't confirm compatibility with paint/draw programs, and our creator score of 17/100 suggests it's not built for that workload. You'll be fine for basic photo viewing, but color accuracy and GPU acceleration for brushes are not its strong suit.

Who Should Skip This

Skip this card if you plan to game, edit 4K video, or even just want a smooth 4K desktop experience—the 38th percentile GPU performance and 0th percentile VRAM make those tasks painful. Developers and creators should steer far away too, given the abysmal 10.8/100 best-for-developer score. If your setup already has integrated graphics from the last five years, you'll gain nothing by adding this card; in many cases, you'll actually lose performance.

Verdict

Buy the ASUS GT 730 if you're reviving an old office PC that needs a silent display adapter, or if you're building a noiseless HTPC for 1080p media. The included brackets and multi-monitor support are genuine perks at this price. But the 15th percentile user sentiment score isn't just noise—owners gripe about 4K@30Hz limitations and power supply worries that can turn a simple upgrade into a headache. For almost any other use, a modern iGPU gives you more performance without spending a dime.