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Rumor Has It: RTX 5050 Gets a 9 GB GDDR7 Boost at Computex

a close up of a graphics card on a table

The upgraded GeForce RTX 5050 is slated to appear at Computex in early June, and the buzz is that NVIDIA will showcase a version equipped with 9 GB of GDDR7 memory. The original RTX 5050 launched with 8 GB of GDDR6 and a 128‑bit memory bus, making it the sole member of the RTX 50 series to rely on the older memory generation.

According to a leak from Benchlife, the new card will keep the same GB207 GPU die and its 2 560 CUDA cores, but will swap in three 3 GB GDDR7 modules. That configuration brings the total VRAM to 9 GB while the memory bus shrinks to 96 bits. The move is not about inflating capacity to 12 GB; instead, it reflects current GDDR6 supply constraints and NVIDIA’s desire to introduce GDDR7 chips without a full redesign.

Computex 2026 runs from June 2 to June 5 in Taipei, giving enthusiasts roughly three months before the potential launch. NVIDIA has not officially confirmed the plan, but the timing lines up with the company’s Blackwell architecture rollout, which originally earmarked the RTX 5050 as a GDDR6‑only product.

The choice to downgrade the bus rather than push a higher‑capacity variant feels like a puzzling misstep that will frustrate budget gamers looking for more headroom. If the company wanted, it could have paired the same die with a 12 GB GDDR7 configuration, yet the current rumors suggest it prefers to stay conservative for now.

Using 3 GB GDDR7 modules also hints at broader implications for NVIDIA’s laptop lineup. Recent listings show RTX 5070 laptop GPUs advertised with 12 GB of VRAM, a setup only possible if the same 3‑GB chips are employed. So far, the RTX 5090 laptop remains the only model confirmed to use these modules, making the RTX 5050 a likely first step toward wider adoption.

If the 9 GB RTX 5050 does materialize at Computex, it will arrive with the same core specifications as its predecessor, offering a modest VRAM bump without a dramatic performance leap. Gamers and builders should keep an eye on supply chain developments, as the shift to GDDR7 could influence pricing and availability across the mid‑range market.

Via NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5050 With 9 GB GDDR7 Memory Rumored To Debut At Computex