NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 SUPER Series Rumored for Q4 2025 Launch with Substantial VRAM Upgrades
NVIDIA’s next step in its GPU roadmap might arrive sooner than expected. According to new information shared by TweakTown, the highly anticipated GeForce RTX 50 SUPER series could debut as early as Q4 2025, possibly aligning with the holiday shopping season. This timing would strategically place NVIDIA’s new release in the middle of the consumer upgrade cycle, potentially capturing demand during one of the most lucrative sales periods of the year.
While earlier speculation pointed to a potential early 2026 announcement at CES 2026, mirroring the RTX 40 SUPER series rollout this past January the latest rumors suggest NVIDIA is now preparing for an earlier launch. Sources close to the matter indicate the RTX 50 SUPER refresh is currently tracking for a release before year-end, giving Team Green a chance to correct the bumpy rollout of its initial RTX 50 series, which was plagued by availability and inventory constraints, especially among high-end variants.
What sets the RTX 50 SUPER series apart, if the leaks are accurate, are its aggressive VRAM upgrades. The GeForce RTX 5080 SUPER is said to be configured with a generous 24 GB of GDDR7 memory, while the RTX 5070 Ti SUPER may come equipped with 18 GB. These figures represent a significant leap over the standard versions, which would greatly benefit workloads in AI, 4K gaming, and content creation pipelines as well as serve enthusiasts who demand high-resolution texture assets and longer future-proofing.
Interestingly, while past SUPER refreshes from NVIDIA typically offered only modest clock boosts or incremental core upgrades, the RTX 50 SUPER seems poised to focus instead on memory bandwidth and capacity. This would be achieved via 3 GB GDDR7 modules, suggesting NVIDIA is aiming for optimized configurations without major changes to the GPU architecture itself, which is still based on Blackwell.
As the RTX Blackwell launch cycle appears to have settled, and unless NVIDIA unexpectedly introduces a budget-oriented GPU before Q4, the RTX 50 SUPER lineup could become the next major push in the consumer GPU segment. However, as with all early reports, this information should be approached with caution until NVIDIA provides official confirmation or preview details.
With 2025’s end approaching, all eyes are on Team Green to see whether it can execute a smoother and more compelling release that resonates with gamers and creators alike.
Would you upgrade to an RTX 50 SUPER for the VRAM alone, or are you waiting to see performance benchmarks first? Let us know your take in the comments below.