More than a decade later, I took another look at the behemoth that was the GTX Titan and what it meant for Nvidia
Nvidia's GeForce GTX Titan is an interesting GPU to look back on, even if it's not that powerful these days.

Think back to 2013, a year where we saw some amazing big titles launch, such as Battlefield 4, Metro: Last Light, and Grand Theft Auto V. Some of these were tough to run at maximum settings, but there was an answer: Nvidia's GeForce GTX Titan. It packed seven billion transistors, 6GB of GDDR5 VRAM, and drew, what was considered at the time, a pretty high 250W to run. There were no RT or Tensor cores either; just 2,668 regular GPU cores, and it supported SLI too.