If you thought the GeForce RTX 5090 with 32 GB of VRAM was impressive, imagine something with triple that amount! A shipping document from an international logistics company suggests that Nvidia might be working on a Blackwell GPU for workstations featuring a massive 96 GB of GDDR7 VRAM. The shipment took place in December.
The company that previously hinted at Intel testing its Nova Lake CPUs has now revealed this GDDR7-equipped GPU with a 512-bit interface. According to the document, the chip is still being tested and unavailable for sale.
This huge memory capacity is aimed at various user groups, including content creators, AI-intensive applications, and high-performance computing (HPC). Given the size of the VRAM, it’s likely that 3 GB modules have been used, in contrast to the 2 GB modules in the RTX 5090.
NVIDIA FOCUS IS THE RTX 50
During his CES 2025 presentation, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang didn’t unveil a new GPU lineup for professional use, instead focusing solely on the GeForce RTX 50 series. These chips already show great potential for workstation and AI applications, particularly the RTX 5090, which boasts a new generation of tensor cores and impressive performance for such tasks.
The release of Blackwell GPUs for consumer use is set for January 30th. At launch, Nvidia’s new family of graphics cards will include the GeForce RTX 5090 and RTX 5080, with the RTX 5070 and its IT version expected to follow in February.
There’s also a chance that Nvidia will unveil Blackwell GPUs for workstations during this year’s GTC event, which is scheduled for March 17–21.