Best GPU Under AED 2000 (2026) — United Arab Emirates
At AED 2000 you're paying for consistency: high framerates at 1440p even in demanding titles, and a genuinely playable (if not maxed-out) 4K experience with upscaling enabled.
Best for high-refresh 1440p gaming (165Hz+) and as an entry point for 4K gaming with DLSS/FSR upscaling.
🆕 New
GPU Name | Price | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
NVIDIA | 0.329 | 35/100 | 10 GB | |
NVIDIA | 0.330 | 30/100 | 8 GB | |
| 0.606 | 28/100 | 8 GB | ||
NVIDIA | 0.448 | 20/100 | 8 GB | |
NVIDIA | 0.354 | 18/100 | 12 GB |
♻️ Used
GPU Name | Price | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.522 | 28/100 | 16 GB | ||
NVIDIA | 0.288 | 7/100 | 4 GB |
Frequently Asked Questions
Is AED 2000 enough for 4K gaming?
With upscaling (DLSS/FSR) enabled and settings tuned, yes for most titles. Native 4K at max settings in the most demanding games usually needs a higher tier.
What's the difference between this tier and AED 1600?
The jump typically buys meaningfully higher average framerates and better ray-tracing headroom, rather than a new resolution tier outright.
Is more VRAM worth paying extra for at this tier?
Generally yes if two cards have a similar Value Score — more VRAM protects against stutter in texture-heavy titles as game requirements grow.