Skip to content

Main Navigation

Puget Systems Logo
  • Solutions
    • Recommended Systems For:
    • Content Creation
      • Photo Editing
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Adobe Lightroom Classic
        • Adobe Photoshop
        • Stable Diffusion
      • Video Editing
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Adobe After Effects
        • Adobe Premiere Pro
        • DaVinci Resolve
        • Foundry Nuke
      • 3D Design & Animation
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Autodesk 3ds Max
        • Autodesk Maya
        • Blender
        • Cinema 4D
        • Houdini
        • ZBrush
      • Real-Time Engines
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Game Development
        • Unity
        • Unreal Engine
        • Virtual Production
      • Rendering
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Keyshot
        • OctaneRender
        • Redshift
        • V-Ray
      • Digital Audio
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Ableton Live
        • FL Studio
        • Pro Tools
    • Engineering
      • Architecture & CAD
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Autodesk AutoCAD
        • Autodesk Inventor
        • Autodesk Revit
        • SOLIDWORKS
      • Visualization
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • Enscape
        • Lumion
        • Twinmotion
      • Photogrammetry & GIS
        • Recommended Systems For:
        • ArcGIS Pro
        • Agisoft Metashape
        • Pix4D
        • RealityCapture
    • AI & HPC
      • Recommended Systems For:
      • Data Science
      • Generative AI
      • Large Language Models
      • Machine Learning / AI Dev
      • Scientific Computing
    • More
      • Recommended Systems For:
      • Compact Size
      • Live Streaming
      • NVIDIA RTX Studio
      • Quiet Operation
      • Virtual Reality
    • Business & Enterprise
      We can empower your company
    • Government & Education
      Services tailored for your organization
  • Products
    • Computer System Styles:
    • Desktop Workstations
      • AMD Ryzen
        • Ryzen 9000:
        • Mini Tower
        • Mid Tower
        • Full Tower
      • AMD Threadripper
        • Threadripper 7000:
        • Mid Tower
        • Full Tower
        • Threadripper PRO 5000WX:
        • Full Tower
        • Threadripper PRO 7000WX:
        • Full Tower
      • AMD EPYC
        • EPYC 9004:
        • Full Tower
      • Intel Core
        • Core 13th Gen:
        • Small Form Factor
        • Core 14th Gen:
        • Mini Tower
        • Mid Tower
        • Full Tower
      • Intel Xeon
        • Xeon W-2400:
        • Mid Tower
        • Xeon W-3400:
        • Full Tower
    • Custom Computers
    • Laptop Workstations
      • Puget Mobile 17″
    • Rackstations
      • AMD Rackstations
        • Ryzen 7000:
        • R550-6U 5-Node
        • Ryzen 9000:
        • R121-4U
        • Threadripper 7000:
        • T121-4U
        • Threadripper PRO 5000WX:
        • WRX80 4U
        • Threadripper PRO 7000WX:
        • T141-4U
        • EPYC 9004:
        • E140-4U
      • Intel Rackstations
        • Core 14th Gen:
        • C131-4U
        • Xeon W-3400:
        • X141-4U
        • X141-5U
    • Custom Rackmount Workstations
    • Puget Servers
      • Puget Servers
        • AMD EPYC:
        • E200-1U
        • E140-2U
        • E280-4U
        • Intel Xeon:
        • X200-1U
    • Custom Servers
    • Storage Solutions
      • Network Attached Storage
        • QNAP NAS Recommendations
      • Puget Storage
        • Puget Storage:
        • 12-Bay 2U
        • 24-Bay 2U
        • 36-Bay 4U
    • Recommended Third Party Peripherals
      Curated list of accessories for your workstation
    • Puget Gear
      Quality apparel with Puget Systems branding
  • Publications
    • Articles
    • Blog Posts
    • Case Studies
    • HPC Blog
    • Podcasts
    • Press
    • PugetBench
  • Support
    • Contact Support
    • Support Articles
    • Warranty Details
    • Onsite Services
    • Unboxing
  • About Us
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Our Customers
    • Enterprise
    • Gov & Edu
    • Press Kit
    • Testimonials
    • Careers
  • Talk to an Expert
  • My Account
  1. Home
  2. /
  3. Hardware Articles
  4. /
  5. Can you game on an NVIDIA Quadro GPU?

Can you game on an NVIDIA Quadro GPU?

Posted on November 13, 2014 (December 9, 2022) by Matt Bach
Always look at the date when you read an article. Some of the content in this article is most likely out of date, as it was written on November 13, 2014. For newer information, see our more recent articles.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Test Setup
  • Quadro K2200 Gaming Performance
  • Quadro K5200 Gaming Performance
  • Conclusion

Introduction

Here at Puget Systems, we sell a wide variety of systems for an equally wide variety of uses. One situation we come across fairly regularly is a customer who needs a Quadro card for their professional work – be it AutoCAD, Maya, or any other application where a workstation card is highly recommended – but they still want to be able to play games in their downtime. They could purchase a second system just for gaming, but why spend that money if they can just use their existing workstation?

Workstation-class hardware like NVIDIA Quadro video cards tend to receive a really bad rap in the gaming community because the cost-to-performance ratio is not anywhere near as good as the GeForce cards that are designed and optimized specifically for gaming. Some have even gone to the point of claiming that you cannot play games on NVIDIA Quadro video cards at all! There is a kernel of truth to this – gaming cards will perform better in games for a much lower price. But saying that you cannot game on a workstation card is completely false. While it used to be true that workstations cards didn’t support gaming technologies like DirectX or PhysX, modern Quadro cards no longer have this limitation.

Gaming on a Quadro video card

What we want to show in this article is exactly what kind of gaming performance you can expect from Quadro cards compared to their GeForce counterparts. To do this, we first need to look at the hardware specifications for the latest Quadro cards and find their closest matching GeForce equivalent:

Test Setup

In order to accurately measure how well NVIDIA Quadro cards perform in games, we want to compare a couple of Quadro cards against their closest GeForce equivalent. While we could use the GPU architecture itself (which includes the GPU core and number of CUDA cores) as a way to find the closest equivalent card, Quadro cards tend to have a much different core frequency and lower memory bandwidth than their GeForce counterparts. For this reason, we will instead be using the GPU’s theoretical floating point performance in GFLOPS (which is essentially the core frequency times the number of CUDA cores) to determine which GeForce card we should compare to the Quadro cards.

Closest Performing Equivalent  
Quadro K2200 (1339 GFLOPS) GTX 750 Ti (1306 GFLOPS)
Quadro K4200 (2072 GFLOPS) GTX 760 (2258 GFLOPS)
Quadro K5200 (3070 GFLOPS) GTX 770 (3213 GFLOPS)
Quadro K6000 (5196 GFLOPS) GTX 780 Ti (5040 GFLOPS)

It is worth pointing out that these are not perfect matches and in some cases the difference in theoretical performance is still as large as 9%. Still, this is about as close as you can get and should be close enough to give us something to work with.

For our test system, we used the following hardware:

Testing Hardware
Motherboard: Asus X99 Deluxe
CPU: Intel Xeon E5-2643 v3 (3.4GHz) Six Core 135W
RAM: 4x Crucial DDR4-2133 16GB (64GB total)
GPU: PNY Quadro K2200 4GB (341.05 driver)
EVGA GeForce GTX 750 Ti (344.48 driver)
PNY Quadro K5200 8GB (341.05 driver)
EVGA GeForce GTX 770 2GB ACX (344.48 driver)
Main OS Drive: Samsung 840 EVO 500GB SATA 6Gb/s SSD
OS: Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
PSU: Seasonic X-850 850W

This test system is based on our popular Genesis I workstation and should provide a good platform to see how well the Quadro cards perform while gaming. Note that for this article we will only be specifically benchmarking the Quadro K2200 versus the GeForce GTX 750 Ti and the Quadro K5200 versus the GeForce GTX 770.

Quadro K2200 Gaming Performance

To see how the Quadro K2200 compares to the GeForce GTX 750 Ti we ran five different game benchmarks with the settings configured to give us an average FPS of around 60 with the GTX 750 Ti. Since we are more concerned about relative performance than the raw FPS numbers, we will be presenting the results as a percentage of the GTX 750 Ti’s performance.


FPS graph available here

In terms of theoretical performance the Quadro K2200 should be about 2.5% faster than the GTX 750 Ti. However, in reality it turns out that the K2200 is on average about 7% slower than the GTX 750 Ti. The exact amount depends on the game and ranges anywhere from 4.6% (Unigine Heaven Pro 4.0) to 10.7% (DiRT Showdown).

There are two things that could account for the lower than expected performance from the Quadro K2200. First, one specification in which the GTX 750 Ti beats the K2200 is in memory bandwidth; the GTX 750 Ti is about 8% faster than the K2200. However, we don’t believe that the memory bandwidth alone should make this much of a difference.

What is likely causing the performance discrepancy is the GeForce driver that the GTX 750 Ti uses. This driver has plenty of optimizations specifically for gaming and the Quadro K2200 is simply not getting those benefits since it uses the Quadro driver instead of the GeForce driver.

Quadro K5200 Gaming Performance

To see how the Quadro K5200 performs, we will be running the same five gaming benchmarks only with the settings changed to achieve approximately 60 FPS with the GTX 770.


FPS graph available here

In terms of theoretical performance, the Quadro K5200 should be about 5% slower than the GTX 770, plus whatever impact the GeForce drivers have on performance. Interestingly, unlike what we saw in the Quadro K2200 test where the K2200 performed under what we expected, the Quadro K5200 on average performed much better than we expected. In fact, only two games (Alien vs. Predator and Hitman: Absolution) showed a significant performance drop with the K5200. In the other three games, the K5200 actually performed above what we expected by 1.7-6.5%.

On average, this makes the Quadro K5200 only 3.5% slower than the GTX 770 versus the 5% we expected based on specifications alone.

Conclusion

To answer the original question of this article: Gaming is indeed entirely possible with a NVIDIA Quadro card. GeForce cards are, of course, a much better value given the high cost of Quadro cards, but if you already have a workstation with a Quadro card you shouldn’t be limited in terms of what games you can play. All modern Quadro cards support technologies like DirectX and PhysX, so you should not run into issues running the vast majority of PC games.

As for what kind of gaming performance you can expect from a Quadro card, a lot of it is going to depend on the games you will be playing. From one game to another, we saw fluctuations in relative performance as high as 11%. However, based on our testing and years of experience working with Quadro video cards, we can make the following rough estimations of Quadro gaming performance:

K2200: ~5-11% slower than GTX 750 Ti
K4200: ~4-11% slower than GTX 760
K5200: ~2-11% slower than GTX 770
K6000: ~1-10% slower than GTX 780 Ti

These are very much broad estimations, but we feel that it should at least be in the right ballpark for each card. If you are happy with this performance then you should have no problems gaming with a Quadro video card. However, if you want better gaming performance than your current (or planned) Quadro card can provide, it may actually be cheaper to get a dedicated gaming system than to upgrade your Quadro card due to the cost of higher-end Quadro cards. 

Tags: gaming, Quadro, Workstation

Who is Puget Systems?

Puget Systems builds custom workstations, servers and storage solutions tailored for your work.

We provide:

Extensive performance testing
making you more productive and giving better value for your money

Reliable computers
with fewer crashes means more time working & less time waiting

Support that understands
your complex workflows and can get you back up & running ASAP

A proven track record
as shown by our case studies and customer testimonials

Get Started

Browse Systems

Puget Systems Mobile Laptop Workstation Icon

Mobile

Puget Systems Tower Workstation Icon

Workstations

Puget Systems Rackmount Workstation Icon

Rackstations

Puget Systems Rackmount Server Icon

Servers

Puget Systems Rackmount Storage Icon

Storage

Latest Articles

  • LLM Inference – Professional GPU performance
  • LLM Inference – Consumer GPU performance
  • AMD Ryzen 9000: Performance vs Previous Generations
  • AMD Ryzen 9000 Content Creation Review
  • DaVinci Resolve Studio: AMD Ryzen 9000 Series vs Intel Core 14th Gen
View All

Post navigation

 Impact of Temperature on Intel CPU PerformanceMost Reliable PC Hardware of 2014 
Puget Systems Logo
Build Your Own PC Site Map FAQ
facebook instagram linkedin rss twitter youtube

Optimized Solutions

  • Adobe Premiere
  • Adobe Photoshop
  • Solidworks
  • Autodesk AutoCAD
  • Machine Learning

Workstations

  • Content Creation
  • Engineering
  • Scientific PCs
  • More

Support

  • Online Guides
  • Request Support
  • Remote Help

Publications

  • All News
  • Puget Blog
  • HPC Blog
  • Hardware Articles
  • Case Studies

Policies

  • Warranty & Return
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Delivery Times
  • Accessibility

About Us

  • Testimonials
  • Careers
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

© Copyright 2024 - Puget Systems, All Rights Reserved.