🎮 What's My IP

What Is My GPU?

Instantly identify your graphics card model and specifications

Your Graphics Card

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📊 GPU Information

🎨 Graphics Capabilities

Performance Information

Check More System Information

Explore your complete hardware specifications

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About Graphics Cards (GPUs)

A Graphics Processing Unit (GPU), also called a graphics card or video card, is the hardware component responsible for rendering images, videos, and animations on your screen. GPUs are essential for gaming, video editing, 3D modeling, and other graphics-intensive tasks.

Major GPU Manufacturers

  • NVIDIA: Known for GeForce RTX and GTX gaming cards, also makes professional Quadro cards
  • AMD: Produces Radeon RX gaming cards and professional Radeon Pro series
  • Intel: Makes integrated graphics (Intel HD, Iris Xe) and Arc discrete GPUs
  • Apple: Custom M-series chips with integrated GPUs for Mac devices

Why Check Your GPU?

  • Determine if your system meets game or software requirements
  • Verify GPU upgrade installations
  • Troubleshoot graphics-related issues
  • Check if you have dedicated or integrated graphics
  • Identify your GPU for driver updates
  • Compare your hardware to recommended specifications

WebGL Detection Method

Our tool uses WebGL (Web Graphics Library) to detect your GPU. WebGL is a JavaScript API that allows browsers to render 3D graphics without plugins. Through WebGL, we can access information about your graphics card vendor and renderer string, which reveals your GPU model.

Integrated vs. Dedicated GPUs

Integrated GPUs are built into your CPU and share system memory. They're power-efficient but less powerful, suitable for basic tasks and casual gaming. Dedicated GPUs are separate cards with their own memory (VRAM), offering significantly better performance for gaming, video editing, and professional graphics work.

Limitations of Browser Detection

Browser-based GPU detection has limitations due to security and privacy restrictions. We can identify your GPU model through WebGL, but cannot access detailed specifications like VRAM size, clock speeds, or temperature. For complete GPU information, use system tools like GPU-Z (Windows), System Information (macOS), or lspci (Linux).