Nvidia may not be done with its GeForce RTX 50 lineup after all. A fresh leak suggests the company is still planning Super-branded refreshes, with a possible GeForce RTX 5060 Super joining rumored RTX 5070 Super and RTX 5080 Super cards. The apparent upgrade across the range is more memory rather than a wholesale redesign.
The latest claims come from the well-known leaker MEGAsizeGPU, who says the previously discussed RTX 5070 Super and RTX 5080 Super specs have not changed. Nvidia has not confirmed any RTX 50 Super products, so for now this is still in rumor territory, but the outline is becoming more consistent: bigger VRAM buffers, same basic family positioning, and a quiet attempt to stretch the life of the Blackwell generation.
Rumored memory bumps across the RTX 50 Super range
According to the leak, GeForce RTX 5080 Super and RTX 5070 Ti Super could each ship with 24 GB of GDDR7 memory, while the RTX 5070 Super may land with 18 GB of GDDR7. That is a straightforward way to make a refresh look meaningful without forcing Nvidia to redesign the cards from scratch, and it also lines up with the industry’s current habit of using memory capacity as the easiest spec to move.
There is also a possible twist at the lower end of the stack: a 12 GB model based on the RTX 5060. If Nvidia uses the ”Super” label there, it would likely be GeForce RTX 5060 Super, and the reported setup would use four 3 GB GDDR7 chips to raise capacity without changing bus width. That is a neat trick on paper, and a very Nvidia trick in practice.
- GeForce RTX 5080 Super: 24 GB GDDR7
- GeForce RTX 5070 Ti Super: 24 GB GDDR7
- GeForce RTX 5070 Super: 18 GB GDDR7
- Possible GeForce RTX 5060 Super: 12 GB GDDR7
Why this GeForce RTX 50 Super refresh looks familiar
Nvidia has done this before: a mid-cycle Super update gives reviewers something new to benchmark, gives retail shelves a fresh label, and often nudges buyers who were already waiting on the sidelines. The pattern also helps explain why memory increases are the headline here; in a market where AMD and Intel continue to push value-focused alternatives, extra VRAM is an easy selling point, even when the underlying silicon stays close to the original recipe.
MEGAsizeGPU has previously surfaced details about the RTX 4060 and RTX 4060 Ti before those cards were officially announced, which is why the chatter is getting attention. Still, until Nvidia says anything publicly, the safest reading is simple: a Super refresh is being talked about, and the most likely improvement is more memory across the board rather than a dramatic leap in performance.
The open question for buyers
If this lineup does arrive, the interesting part will not be the name on the box but the pricing gap between the regular cards and their Super replacements. A 12 GB RTX 5060 Super would make sense only if Nvidia keeps it close enough to the standard model to feel like a real upgrade, not just a sticker swap with a louder fan curve. Otherwise, the company risks teaching shoppers the oldest lesson in GPU buying: wait three months and the ”new” card is just the old one with more memory.

