Foundry Nuke is the industry standard compositing application for film and television VFX. It processes high-resolution camera plates — 4K, 6K, and 8K — through complex node graphs involving color correction, keying, roto, 3D compositing, and final output. The hardware demands of professional Nuke work are significant, and the bottlenecks are different from rendering applications: VRAM for GPU-accelerated node processing, fast storage for high-bitrate plate access, and large system RAM for multi-frame caching.
How Nuke uses hardware
Nuke’s primary processing path uses the GPU for hardware-accelerated node evaluation. Nuke processes nodes using CUDA on NVIDIA GPUs, accelerating color operations, blurs, transforms, and GPU-enabled effects. Higher GPU compute throughput and VRAM capacity mean faster interactive playback and faster render output for GPU-accelerated node graphs.
The CPU handles nodes that run on the CPU path, project management, timeline operations, and file I/O. High single-core CPU clock speed improves the responsiveness of CPU-path nodes and the overall Nuke interface. More CPU cores accelerate multi-threaded operations and background render processes.
System RAM holds the frame cache. Nuke caches processed frames in RAM to enable smooth playback without re-rendering every frame on scrub. More RAM means more frames cached — critical for reviewing complex node graphs on high-resolution footage without constant re-computation. 128GB of system RAM is the practical minimum for professional 4K–6K Nuke work with deep caches.
Storage: high-bitrate plate access
Film camera formats — ARRI ARRIRAW, RED REDCODE, Sony X-OCN — produce large files. A 6K ARRIRAW frame is approximately 8–15MB. A 3-minute VFX sequence at 24fps is roughly 35–65GB of source plates. Reading these from storage during real-time playback requires sustained NVMe read bandwidth. Slow storage produces dropped frames during plate review, which is one of the most common workflow frustrations in Nuke sessions.
A dedicated NVMe plate drive — separate from the OS drive — prevents system activity from competing with plate streaming during active compositing sessions.
Recommended configurations
VFX compositor — 4K film work
- GPU: NVIDIA RTX 5090 (32GB GDDR7)
- CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 9950X
- RAM: 128GB DDR5 (large frame cache)
- OS NVMe: 1TB PCIe 4.0
- Plate NVMe: 8TB dedicated for camera originals
VFX supervisor / senior compositor — 6K–8K, complex graphs
- GPU: NVIDIA RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell (96GB ECC)
- CPU: AMD Threadripper PRO 9995WX
- RAM: 256GB DDR5
- Storage: High-capacity NVMe array for plates and renders
Browse Nuke workstation configurations on the VRLA Tech Nuke Workstation page.
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Nuke workstations. Large RAM cache. Fast plates.
3-year parts warranty. Lifetime US engineer support.
VRLA Tech has been building custom workstations since 2016. All systems ship with a 3-year parts warranty and lifetime US-based engineer support.




