NVidia purchases gaming physics processor maker PhysX

By Michael Hatamoto | Published February 5, 2008, 2:56 PM

Graphics card producer NVidia confirmed late yesterday it is purchasing Ageia Technologies, the first producer of so-called "physics processors" for 3D gamers, for an undisclosed amount.

Ageia Technologies is best known for its PhysX processor, which is supported by popular games such as Gears of War, the Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon series, and Unreal Tournament 3. Working under NVidia's wing will help the company properly implement PhysX into future product launches, which should result in a broader target market.

"Both Ageia and NVidia share the same commitment and passion for making the gaming experience dynamic and vivid," said Marti Miernik, Ageia spokesperson, in a statement to BetaNews this afternoon. "The combination of graphics and physics impacts the way a virtual world looks and behaves, thus driving the end-user experience. By combining Ageia's powerful PhysX technology with NVidia's industry-leading GPU architectures, we will ensure that gamers and developers alike take advantage of the most compelling physics on the market." Currently, the PhysX chip is utilized in all three next-gen game consoles available on the market today: the Microsoft Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, and Nintendo Wii. More than 140 game titles currently shipping support PhysX.

NVidia's purchase will set up a competition with Intel, which purchased Havok last September, although Havok's processor is geared more toward professional applications such as high-quality animation.

BFG Technologies has yet to comment on the deal; it produces OEM graphics cards for NVidia as well as its own PhysX-based physics card, and may or may not be impacted. Ageia also declined comment on future OEM products. NVidia will hold a phone conference later this week to discuss its purchase.

Comments

View comments by with a score of at least

NVidia is now in direct competition with both AMD and Intel. Graphics chips against AMD (via ATI), Physics chips against Intel. It seems to me like they are making competitors on both sides of things. Personally, I like Via and AMD best anyway, but you've got to have someone that's not a direct competitor.

Score: 0

|

I wonder if this will result in a Nvidia and Phys-X GPU hybrid. Maybe a dual core Nvidia GPU with a Phys-X GPU included? or will Nividia just incorporate the Phys-X techonology in to their next family of Gforce or maybe Xforce graphics cards. My wish list would be a tri-core GPU with 2 9x00's and a Phys-X and all running at 1GHz.

Score: 0

|

An astute business move.

Score: 0

|

Awesome.

While many here will argue the market angle and worry about competition and such, the immediate benefit is that this means PhysX will finally have the marketing platform it needs to catch on.

Score: 0

|

I agree, this is wonderful news.

I can taste the GeForce 9800P Ultra already. :)

Score: 0

|

Exactly.

Score: 0

|

Breakthrough: AMD and Intel settle antitrust dispute, reach new cross-license agreement

UPDATED 12:25 pm ET Only exclusionary business practices, not some rebates, may be covered by a new agreement on Intel's future business conduct.

HP to acquire 3Com for $2.7 B in cash, focus on China

A long and uncertain comeback trail comes to an end for the one-time network equipment giant.

Universities reject Kindle DX as a textbook replacement

Two universities running Kindle DX pilot programs have rejected the device.

Snow Leopard and Windows 7 still can't crack the netbook problem

Apple has killed Atom support in OS X 10.6.2 and Windows 7 Starter Edition is stripped of "basic" functionality.

Boxee's first official hardware to premiere December 7

Boxee's elegant freeware multimedia manager software will soon have its own hardware

Windows Marketplace for Mobile now available in browser, iTunes' App Store still not

You can now check out what Windows Marketplace for Mobile has to offer without a Windows Phone.

Microsoft damage control after marketer claims Win7 inspired by Mac

Have you ever said anything you wish you could take back? Ever? No? Not even once? Well then, you won't sympathize with a mid-level Microsoft manager today.

Facebook for iPhone developer goes from Apple supporter to 'I quit!' in 3 months

Fed up with Apple's App Store policies, the developer of Facebook for iPhone has bailed on the iPhone.

Bing vs. Google rematch on video search

After Microsoft folds some old MSN Video features back into Bing, do they add to the search engine's functionality or take away?

Bing gets geekier with new Wolfram Alpha integration

Microsoft's Bing is now teamed up with Wolfram Alpha for computational search results.

New EU telecoms framework mandates user consent before getting cookies

Do you want a cookie? No. Do you want a cookie? No. Do you want a cookie? No. Do you want...Are you annoyed yet? That's a preview of 2011.