The Gainward Ghost line includes purely orthodox middle-class video accelerators with high-quality performance, inconspicuous design, a two-section cooling system and affordable prices. As practice shows, most gamers appreciate this ability of brands to prioritize, preferring classic Gaming format graphics cards to top models with powerful RGB backlighting, liquid cooling, dual BIOS and other flagship amenities.


When designing Ghost graphics cards, Gainward engineers didn't bother with PCB design, minimized backlighting (only the logo on the side glows), and abandoned the fussy shroud design. At the same time, they did not skimp on cooling the memory chips and the video core, using metal backplates and radiators with several heat pipes everywhere. As conceived by the manufacturer, Ghost cards are designed for owners of old-school closed cases and fans of “buy, install and forget” editing. For open stands with an abundance of lighting and decorative elements, they are not very suitable. Rather, you can put it, but the aesthetics will be lame.

The core of the series is made up of mid-range GeForce graphics cards, regardless of their generation. It can be either an old, but still relevant model in the spirit of the GTX GeForce GTX 1060 Super, or a more modern version based on the Ampere architecture (RTX 3050 or RTX 3060). The amount of memory depends on which generation the video accelerator belongs to. In older GTX 16XX models, 4-6 GB of video memory was usually installed, in new versions this amount increased to 8-12 GB, and the memory itself became somewhat faster, but this does not affect the overall performance level that much. Thus, variants from the Gainward Ghost line are best suited for playing at medium or high graphics settings at Full HD / 2K resolution.