Nvidia Pressures Reviewers To Highlight DLSS And Frame Gen In Their Benchmarks, Report Claims

Expert Verified By

NVIDIA Allegedly Tries To Push Favorable Narratives!

Story Highlight
  • A popular YouTuber, Gamers Nexus, reports that Nvidia pressures reviewers to drive certain favorable narratives.
  • The company allegedly wants to keep highlighting DLSS and Multi-Frame Generation in benchmarks while pushing for inflated frame rates in charts.
  • Media outlets that publish favorable narratives get preferential treatment, including exclusive driver access for RTX 5060 previews.

Nvidia’s reign over the gaming industry has grown with its new lineup of 50xx GPU offerings, but this might not work out in an average gamer’s favor. A new report reveals that the company pressures reviewers to push certain favorable narratives.

In a detailed video, YouTuber Gamers Nexus claimed that Nvidia is manipulating reviews by compelling reviewers to highlight DLSS and Multi-Frame Generation in benchmarks. 

The team at Gamers Nexus can only have access to interviews, technical discussions, and access to engineers if they talk about DLSS and MFG.

Why it matters: The report shows that Nvidia’s massive monopoly is allegedly not being used for the greater good of the gaming scene. Many gamers have criticized the company for trying to manipulate reviews online.

That’s not all; the video claims that reviewers who refuse to comply face restricted access to technical discussions. Nvidia also insists on inflated frame rate multipliers in benchmark charts to exaggerate how well its GPUs hold up during testing.

by threatening access to interviews and hardware, Nvidia has created a scenario where all of the intentions have to be questioned and that can even include ours if people don’t know about this which is why we have to expose it now.

The outlets that push favorable Nvidia content and are less critical receive preferential treatment, such as getting exclusive driver access to publish RTX 5060 previews before launch. However, qualified reviewers with a crucial stance are often blocked from early testing.

Nvidia Employees Rich
Nvidia is one of the world’s largest and most successful tech companies.

This development highlights another problem with Nvidia amid unsatisfactory upgrades over the last 40xx generation and GPU price hikes of up to 10% to 15% amid rising costs, which has bumped the price of its flagship RTX 5090 to $2500.

Do you think Nvidia pressuring reviewers with certain narratives will harm its image in the long run? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below, or join the discussion on the Tech4Gamers forum.

Was our article helpful? 👨‍💻

Thank you! Please share your positive feedback. 🔋

How could we improve this post? Please Help us. 😔

Gear Up For Latest News

Get exclusive gaming & tech news before it drops. Sign up today!

Join Our Community

Still having issues? Join the Tech4Gamers Forum for expert help and community support!

Latest News

Join Our Community

104,000FansLike
32,122FollowersFollow

Trending

Elden Ring Nightreign Review Roundup – FromSoftware’s Flawless Streak Broken

Elden Ring Nightreign has received its first reviews, and the game seems to be a rare dent in FromSoftware's perfect legacy.

A Variety Of Unannounced Games To Be Revealed During Xbox Showcase 2025, Says Insider

A reliable insider claims that Xbox is aiming to reveal a plethora of unannounced games during the upcoming June Xbox Showcase 2025 event.

The Last of Us Part 2 Sold More Than 2 Million Copies During Season 2’s Run

The Last of Us Part 2 sold more than 2 million copies within the release window of the TV show’s second season.

Death Stranding Anime In Development By Kojima Productions

Hideo Kojima recently announced that an anime of Death Stranding is in the works, along with the live-action film.

PS5 Price Hike Could Be Avoided If US And China Reach Tariff Agreement By August, Suggests Analyst

It seems Sony will decide the final price of the PS5 and PS5 Pro in August once the final decision regarding the new tariffs is made.
OSZAR »