Reports have surfaced regarding the release of the GeForce RTX 50 Super. We could expect the new Nvidia graphics cards later in 2025.
We first heard about the next Nvidia graphics cards in April of this year. Back then, there were leaks that revealed the plans for the launch of the RTX 5070 Super and 5080 Super. This is another part of Nvidia's strategy, which in this way can dominate this year's calendar of releases. This is also a response to the growing needs of players, requiring more VRAM memory (see Tweak Town).
According to published reports, we can expect the RTX 50 Super earlier than initially assumed. Originally, the plan was to launch the graphics cards at the beginning of 2026, during the CES 2026 trade show. It's worth mentioning how the RTX 50 presentation looked when it was first shown at this year's January event.
However, it currently seems that Nvidia has chosen a different strategy. Instead of 2026, the last quarter of the current year was chosen. The company wants to attract computer owners who are interested in upgrading their setup for the holidays. If someone has been holding off on getting a new GPU because of the leaks about the Super series, then the latest news is good for them.
From the very beginning, the RTX 50s were criticized for having too little VRAM memory. RTX 5070 has 12 GB, RTX 5070 Ti 16 GB, and RTX 5080 also 16 GB. This will change with the introduction of the Super models, as they significantly increase the memory size of given graphics cards.
More memory also means higher bandwidth, but not for every graphics card, only for the RTX 5080 Super (changing from 960 GB/s to 1024 GB/s). However, each of the three mentioned models will require more power compared to its predecessor. The difference ranges from 25 W to 55 W depending on the card.
Unfortunately, we still don't have any information regarding suggested prices. Although the release of the RTX 50 showed that despite everything, you can't rely on them.
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Author: Zbigniew Woznicki
He began his adventure with journalism and writing on the Allegro website, where he published news related to games, technology, and social media. He soon appeared on Gamepressure and Filmomaniak, writing about news related to the film industry. Despite being a huge fan of various TV series, his heart belongs to games of all kinds. He isn't afraid of any genre, and the adventure with Tibia taught him that sky and music in games are completely unnecessary. Years ago, he shared his experiences, moderating the forum of mmorpg.org.pl. Loves to complain, but of course constructively and in moderation.