Vanta

Vanta was the value end of the TNT2 era, historically useful for OEM PCs but easy to overpay for.

Reference GPU
Partial entry. Core specifications may be present, but history, variant notes, known issues, and source review may be incomplete.
Add to comparison

Save this GPU, then open another GPU page to compare them side by side.

At a Glance

Entry Type
Reference GPU
Architecture
NV6 / Vanta
Series
Vanta
GPU Die
NV6 / Vanta class
Launch Date
1999-03-15
Launch MSRP
OEM and board partner pricing varied
Memory
8 MB or 16 MB typical, with some related boards at 32 MB SDRAM
Bus Width
64-bit
TDP/TBP
Not consistently specified in public board data
Interface
AGP 2x, AGP 4x, or PCI depending on exact board
Data Confidence
Partial

Overview

Vanta is important because it shows the low-cost side of the TNT2 generation. It brought NVIDIA compatibility and basic 3D acceleration into value PCs, but with clear bandwidth and performance limits compared with full TNT2 cards.

As a collector card, Vanta is more about documenting an OEM or budget build than chasing flagship performance. The exact memory size and board layout should be recorded because many examples are plain OEM pulls.

Why It Mattered

Vanta shows how quickly NVIDIA turned high-volume OEM segmentation into part of the graphics market. It made TNT2-era features cheaper, but at a clear bandwidth and performance cost.

Collector Notes

Vanta is common as an OEM pull and less collectible than full TNT2 or TNT2 Ultra boards. Record whether the board is Vanta, Vanta LT, M64, or another relabeled TNT2-family design.

Common Failure Points

The usual problem is overexpectation. Vanta can be fine for a value-period build, but it is not a substitute for TNT2 Ultra or GeForce 256 performance. Passive cooling and poor OEM storage can also matter.

Used-Market Caution

Buy Vanta only when a low-cost period-correct display adapter is the goal. Avoid listings that price it like a full TNT2 or TNT2 Ultra, and confirm memory size, bus type, and tested 3D output.

Known Issues

Listings often blur Vanta, Vanta LT, TNT2 M64, and full TNT2 cards. The 64-bit memory bus is the key performance limiter.

SourcesPartial

Sources reviewed: 2026-06-21

This entry is still being source-checked.

Data confidence and source status

Partial entry. Core specifications may be present, but history, variant notes, known issues, and source review may be incomplete.

  • Verified: core specifications and historical notes have been reviewed against listed sources.
  • Partial: core specifications may be present, but history, variant notes, known issues, and source review may be incomplete.
  • Imported: spec-only imported entry pending editorial source review.
  • Needs source review: narrative notes are incomplete until reviewed.

Primary / manufacturer sources

  1. DOS Days RIVA TNT2 SeriesTNT2, TNT2 Ultra, TNT2 Pro, M64, Vanta, and Vanta LT family contextOpen source
  2. Archived NVIDIA TNT2 product pageNVIDIA product positioning archiveOpen source

Independent reference sources

  1. TechPowerUp Vanta GPU SpecsModel-level specification referenceOpen source

Other sources

  1. Creative 3D Blaster RIVA TNT2 Ultra datasheetBoard-level TNT2 Ultra performance and cooler contextOpen source

Found an incorrect spec, missing source, or variant issue?

Submit a correction