According to the latest update, the series includes 14 different cards featuring artwork and designs from historical graphics cards, classic tech demos, and iconic platform releases that have shaped the GeForce brand over the decades. Nvidia just unveiled its “GeForce Trading Cards: Series 1,” a free series of collectable cards celebrating the publisher’s history in PC tech industry.
According to the latest update, the series also functions cards inspired by tech demos such as Bubble, Chameleon, and Medusa, and platform releases such as Unreal Tournament 2004 and Borderlands. The cards include the NV1 from 1995, the GeForce 256 from 1999, the GeForce 3 from 2001, GeForce 7800 GTX from 2005, and GeForce GTX 1080 from 2016.
As part of the ongoing story, as such, these aren’t actual, usable trading cards. These collector cards are being given away free of charge as part of Nvidia’s “Summer of RTX” campaign via the publisher’s social media channels and at tech industry conventions and events like Gamescom 2026.
As part of the ongoing story, an added bonus is that even though the worldwide memory shortage has driven up the prices of graphics cards, the GeForce Trading Cards: Series 1 cards are a type of Nvidia card that everyone can afford—although that might not be the case once they hit the second-hand market. According to Nvidia, the aim is to celebrate the graphics cards and platform releases that have shaped generations of PC gamers.
As part of the ongoing story, this article originally appeared on our sister publication PC för Alla and was translated and localized from Swedish.
In a fresh development, he is passionate about technology and is on the ball with the most recent product drops and the hottest talking points in the consumer tech industry. Viktor writes news and reports for our sister sites, M3 and PC för Alla.