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GamesRadar
GamesRadar
Technology
Phil Hayton

Nvidia's RTX 50 Super GPUs will allegedly show up in early 2027, but I'd be surprised if PC players are circling their calendars

Close up photo of Nvidia GeForce RTX graphics card with green backdrop.

Looks like Nvidia GeForce RTX 50 Super graphics cards are back on the menu, boys, as fresh rumours point towards an early 2027 release date. The latest insider tidbits contradict adjacent claims that the GPUs will land this year, but I've got a funny feeling most players aren't really keeping track.

The latest RTX 50 Super leak by Benchlife specifically states that the refreshed GPUs will come armed with 3GB GDDR7 VRAM modules and arrive "as early as the beginning of 2027." While the report disputes information by MEGAsizeGPU that the cards will arrive in 2026, it corroborates claims that the lineup includes an 18GB RTX 5070 Super and a 24GB RTX 5080 Super, alongside an apparent RTX 5060 with 12GB VRAM instead of 8GB.

Naturally, the above RTX 50 Super release timeline is anything but confirmed, and it should be ingested with the usual grain of salt. Benchlife's information is potentially based on board partner expectations, and MEGAsizeGPU has clarified that they don't know of a specific release window.

The main question on my mind is whether most players will wait for RTX 50 Super GPUs. Yes, they should provide an fps boost thanks to refreshed specs and slightly more VRAM courtesy of the new 3GB modules, but the overarching issue of PC upgrade pricing is still looming. If Nvidia manages to release the new models with the same MSRP as before, or perhaps even slightly lower, then that would serve as a lure, Otherwise, the new line-up may simply drive people towards vanilla SKUs if they receive resulting discounts.

In any case, you've potentially got a while before you'll even need to think about the RTX 50 Super series. If you're still rocking an RTX 20-series or something older, new GPUs might be on your mind. That said, if you haven't made the jump to the base 50-series yet, chances are that you're still able to run most games reasonably on your current card, and that may inspire you to wait a bit longer for next gen RTX 6000 options instead.

Looking for more components? Swing by the best CPUs for gaming and the best RAM for vital upgrades.

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