Rumors about the upcoming Nvidia 5000 series GPUs have been building momentum for a good while now, and as the months of 2024 roll by, we’re hearing more and more as the rumor mill churns faster.

Current Nvidia Lovelace RTX graphics cards have delivered mixed performance results; while the enthusiast and premium mid-range models have generally excelled, high prices have prevented the more expensive cards from reaching many gamers.

So it’s not surprising there’s a great deal of excitement, as well as caution, regarding what to expect from Nvidia’s best graphics cards of the Blackwell generation, next-gen GPUs (headed up by the RTX 5090) that may be on the horizon for the end of the year – or maybe not.

In this article, we’ll round up all the key release date rumors, and other news that continues to swirl ahead of the Nvidia 5000 series announcement, updating you with all the fresh details as we hear them.

Nvidia 5000 Series: Cut to the chase

  • What is it? Nvidia’s rumored next generation of RTX graphics cards
  • How much does it cost? Unknown at this time, but will likely scale similarly to Nvidia Lovelace GPUs in price
  • When can I get it? The earliest we expect to see the Nvidia RTX 5000 series would be late 2024 or early 2025

Nvidia 5000 series: Latest news

Nvidia 5000 series: Release date

We obviously don’t know for sure when Nvidia will release its next generation of GPUs, but there is some educated speculation that we can make at this point based on past practice and rumors that have made their way into the public conversation.

For one, Nvidia tends to follow a 18- to 24-month release cadence for its graphics cards, and with the easing of the global chip shortage, we don’t expect to see any delays that push things back from this schedule.

That would put the Nvidia 5000 series release somewhere toward the end of 2024 or to early 2025 at the latest. In the past, the rumor mill has tended to gravitate towards a late 2024 release, but more recent speculation is starting to suggest an early 2025 launch (likely at CES). Whatever the case, rumors also point to a pair of initial Blackwell graphics cards – the RTX 5090 and RTX 5080 (although the latter may arrive just before the flagship).

A scene from Cyberpunk 2077 running on an RTX card

(Image credit: CDPR / Nvidia)

Nvidia RTX 5000 series: Specs

The Nvidia 5000 series RTX GPUs will be based on Nvidia’s Blackwell architecture.

According to a leak on Chinese hardware forum Chiphell, seconded by known online leaker Kopite7kimi, Nvidia’s next-gen GPU series will undergo something of a numbering shakeup. The supposed GPU variants, which will sit at the heart of both Nvidia graphics cards and the best gaming laptops running next-gen Nvidia GPUs, will include:

  • GB202: likely in the Nvidia RTX 5090 and Nvidia RTX 5090 Ti
  • GB203: likely in the Nvidia RTX 5080 and Nvidia RTX 5080 Ti, though possibly in the Nvidia RTX 5070 Ti as well.
  • GB205: Likely in the Nvidia RTX 5070 and RTX 5060 Ti, and possibly in the Nvidia RTX 5070 Ti
  • GB206: Likely in the Nvidia RTX 5060 and possibly the Nvidia RTX 5060 Ti
  • GB207: Likely reserved for the Nvidia RTX 5050 and Nvidia RTX 5050 Ti

In the past, we’ve heard rumors that Nvidia would finally be switching some of its Blackwell GPUs over to a multi-chiplet module (MCM) design, following in the footsteps of AMD and Intel. Whether this will include the Nvidia 5000 series GPUs isn’t clear, however, since the rumors only specified the GB100 GPU, which is a commercial-grade chip for servers, data centers, and industrial use.

At this point, it seems unlikely for GeForce cards, but still – an MCM Nvidia GPU could provide a big boost to performance if done properly, and given that archrival AMD is already using MCMs in its GPUs, Nvidia can’t afford to get left behind here.

We’ve also seen some purported specs for an RTX 5090 from Chiphell forum user Panzerlied, a fairly reliable hardware leaker. According to a now-deleted post, the RTX 5090 will boast some impressive spec upgrades over the RTX 4090:

Swipe to scroll horizontally
Spec RTX 4090 RTX 5090
Streaming Multiprocessors 128 192
CUDA Cores 16,384 24,576
Ray Tracing Cores 128 192
Tensor Cores 512 768
Boost Clock 2.52 GHz 2.9 GHz
L2 Cache 72MB 128MB
Memory Bandwidth 1,008 GB/s 1,532 GB/s

If these specs pan out, this should give the RTX 5090 an absolutely massive gen-on-gen boost, with the same post that detailed the specs claiming that the RTX 5090’s performance was 1.7 times faster than the RTX 4090, which is downright gobsmacking.

Other rumors have indicated a slightly lesser uplift for the RTX 5090, to the tune of a 50% or 60% boost, but let’s face it – that would still represent a massive upgrade. 

We’re also expecting a VRAM loadout of 28GB (with a 448-bit memory bus), in case you were in any doubt of what a monster GPU the Blackwell flagship might be.

With a potential release nearing, we’re betting we’ll hear more spec rumors before long, and we’ll bring you all the latest updates as they happen.

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