AMD's 8GB Radeon RX 9050 could arrive soon to challenge Nvidia's RTX 5050

midian182

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Rumor mill: Despite being in the middle of a well-documented memory crisis that has spiked the price of components and hardware, AMD is reportedly following Nvidia in releasing a new GPU. It's not a surprise early RDNA 5 launch, though: it's an entry-level RX 9050 desktop card with 8GB of VRAM.

According to VideoCardz's report, the Radeon RX 9050 will be a lower-clocked Navi 44 model positioned below the Radeon RX 9060 series in AMD's product stack.

The RX 9050's specs are said to almost match the RX 9060 XT 8GB. It has the same 2,048 cores, 8GB of GDDR6 (18 Gbps), and a 128-bit memory bus. That means it would actually have more cores than the standard RX 9060, though its lower clocks should keep it below the rest of the RX 9060 series. Its 1,920 MHz game clock and 2,600 MHz boost clock are 24% and 17% slower than the RX 9060 XT.

The new card's memory bandwidth is shown as 288 GB/s, matching the Radeon RX 9060 rather than the RX 9060 XT, which is listed at 320 GB/s thanks to its use of 20 Gbps GDDR6 modules.

The RX 9050 is also said to feature a PCIe 5.0 x16 interface, two DisplayPort 2.1a ports, and one HDMI 2.1b port. There's no word yet on total board power (TBP). The recommended power supply is listed as 450W, which is 50W lower than the RX 9060 XT, so the RX 9050's TBP is expected to be less than the RX 9060 XT 8GB's 150W.

Pricing is another unknown. AMD's new card is expected to compete with the RTX 5050. Nvidia's card launched with a $249 MSRP, but the cheapest model on Newegg right now is $289.

AMD hasn't officially announced the RX 9050, but it could be saving that for Computex, which starts in Taipei on June 2.

AMD's rationale for the card is likely the demand for comparatively cheap desktop GPUs, especially from OEMs and budget builders. A cut-down Navi 44 card gives it something to sell below the RX 9060 series. It also gives Team Red a direct answer to Nvidia's RTX 5050, even if another 8GB card in 2026 is unlikely to generate much enthusiasm.

Assuming the report is accurate, this would mark the second new GPU introduced at a time when memory is scarce due to AI prioritization. In late April, Nvidia quietly launched a new variant of the RTX 5070 laptop GPU that includes 12GB of VRAM – 50% more than the standard version. Framework lists the module for $1,199 – 72% more than the 8GB version.

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This RAM crisis might end up with developers actually optimizing their games properly. Maybe 8GB VRAM will be fine for years to come...

Steam Machine gimped as well. 8GB VRAM with a 4K FSR target (aka 1080p)

Next gen consoles, probably will be gimped too. Rumours 1-2 years ago, most was expecting 32GB RAM, now most think 20-24GB tops for PS6 and next Xbox. Leaving around half of that for graphics, since its shared RAM - Up from 16GB today on PS5 and XSX.

12-16GB VRAM owners will have nothing to worry about for years. Unless they insist on native 4K maxed out with RT/PT maybe... That would be less than 1% of PC gamers.

8-10GB VRAM owners might need to compromise slightly but probably won't have much trouble either. If you have option for DLSS 4 or FSR 4, don't worry at all.
 
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If it has the same cores at 9060XT, couldn't it just be overclocked to get the similar performance?
 
It will certainly challenge it for being a pathetic gpu for 2026.*GB, less CU's and slower clocks. An all rounder.
 
They will have the max power locked down. So overclocking wouldn't accomplish much if anything.

Undervolting will fix that

Overclocking the RAM also helps alot on cards using a small bus

Won't change that this is a low-end solution and +10% probably won't change much
 
Can this GPU be made for SFF half height card that run on slot power(less than 75w)?

If the answer is yes, this is an exciting advance for AMD. If not, what's the point?
 
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