Report LinksWe do not store any files or images on our server. XenPaste only index and link to content provided by other non-affiliated sites. If your copyrighted material has been posted on XenPaste or if hyperlinks to your copyrighted material are returned through our search engine and you want this material removed, you must contact the owners of such sites where the files and images are stored.
GPU Caps Viewer is a graphics card information utility focused on the OpenGL, Vulkan, OpenCL and CUDA API level support of the main (primary) graphics card. For Vulkan, OpenCL and CUDA, GPU Caps Viewer details the API support of each capable device available in the system. GPU Caps Viewer offers also a simple GPU monitoring facility (clock speed, temperature, GPU usage, fan speed) for NVIDIA GeForce and AMD Radeon based graphics cards.
Most modern video games feature astonishing visuals which eat up a lot of your video card's resources. This does not only apply to games, specialized applications also making use of GPU. You can get details about the video card installed on your computer through tools integrated in your operating system. However, using tools such as GPU Caps Viewer you can even put it to various tests.
Quick deployment and simple interface
It does not take a lot of time to go through the setup process, in a matter of minutes the interface being brought up at your request. This sports a classic look so that it does not overwhelm you with unnecessary visual elements, which is just right for an application with the main purpose being to offer info.
Various info categories available
Your installed video card is automatically detected as soon as the application is launched. All available details are displayed and you can switch through several tabs, depending on what interests you. As such, you can analyze GPU, OpenGL, CUDA, OpenCL info, each in dedicated tabs.
Put your video card to the test
At the bottom of the main window, you have the possibility to run several test cases, regardless of the tab you currently have opened. You can run OpenGL and OpenCL demos, each with several different presets for each installed driver. Choosing to launch a demo lets you set resolution as well as the level of Multisample anti-aliasing to get...