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RTX 5090, 5080, and 5070 series GPUs: Everything you need to know

At CES 2025, Jensen took to the stage and announced that he got a new jacket. And also the 50 Series of RTX GPUs.

Now that the 50 Series release dates, tech specs, power requirements, and pricing are confirmed, we’re going to wrap it all up here so you can find out everything you need to know about the RTX 50 Series GPUs.

You can take a look at our dedicated 50-Series webstore page to see how CORSAIR is ready to help you power, house, and cable manage the newest GPUs from NVIDIA. For now though, let's take a look at the 5090, 5080, 5070 Ti, and 5070.

rtx 50 series gpus everything you need to know

RTX 50 Series Specs

  RTX 5090 RTX 5080 RTX 5070 Ti RTX 5070
CUDA Cores 21760 10752 8960 6144
Shader Cores Blackwell Blackwell Blackwell Blackwell
AI Tensor Cores 3352 AI TOPS 1801 AI TOPS 1406 AI TOPS 988 AI TOPS
Ray Tracing Cores 318 TFLOPS 171 TFLOPS 133 TFLOPS 94 TFLOPS
Base Clock (GHz) 2.01 2.30 2.30 2.16
Boost Clock (GHz) 2.41 2.62 2.45 2.51
Memory 32 GB GDDR7 16 GB GDDR7 16 GB GDDR7 12 GB GDDR7
Memory Interface 512-bit 256-bit 256-bit 192-bit
Display outputs 3x DisplayPort, 1x HDMI 3x DisplayPort, 1x HDMI 3x DisplayPort, 1x HDMI 3x DisplayPort, 1x HDMI
PCIe Gen 5.0 5.0 5.0 5.0
Max temp (°C) 90 88 88 85
TGP/TDP 575W 360W 300W 250W
Required System Power 1000W 850W 750W 650W

Those are the hard and fast tech specs, head over to NVIDIA's website if you want to see all of the software, encoding, and driver-type information.

5090

RTX 50 Series Power requirements

The power requirements of the 50 Series GPUs turned out to be a little relieving. Many thought the 5090 would absolutely max out the 600W capacity of the 12V2x6 / 12VHPWR standard. Instead, it came in a little lower than that. Find below the TGP/TDP of the 50-Series GPUs, and NVIDIA’s recommended PSU wattages.

Another rumor that thankfully failed to materialise was the speculation about multiple 12V2x6 connections. So, to be clear The 50 Series only needs a single 12V2x6 / 12VHPWR cable. You can learn more about how to power the 50 Series cards with CORSAIR PSUs in our guide.

  RTX 5090 RTX 5080 RTX 5070 Ti RTX 5070
TGP/TDP 575W 360W 300W 250W
Required System Power 1000W 850W 750W 650W

Our PSU calculator has been updated with the 50-Series GPUs and AMD's new X3D CPUs, too. So if you're planning a new build, let the calculator figure out the right CORSAIR PSU for you.

The all-new 2025 RMe Series of PSUs are great options here. They have the latest 12V2x6 native connection, and include a color-coded cable so you can be sure it's securely seated.

rm1000e 2025
rm1000e ports

If you're looking for more detailed power-related content, we have a lot of resources for you, peruse the links below at your leisure.

5080

RTX 50 Series release dates

In addition to a comprehensive crop of specs, we also have some release dates. At time of writing, however, we only have “February” for the 5070 and 5070 Ti.

RTX 50 Series Prices

The prices of the RTX 50 Series turned out to be lower than some feared, which is always a nice surprise.

  • RTX 5090 Price: $1,999 / €2329 / £1,939
  • RTX 5080 Price: $999 / €1169 / £979
  • RTX 5070 Ti Price: $749 / €870 / £729
  • RTX 5070 Price: $549 / €649 / £539

Of course, these are just the MSRPs for the FE Nvidia-made cards. Pricing is sure to differ when Gigabyte, ASUS ROG, MSI and others release their versions.

5070

RTX 50 Series dimensions

Luckily we were treated to way smaller cards than we were expected. Again, just like the prices, do not expect these dimensions to stay the same when AIB cards come out. In fact, the 4070 Ti will only be made available via ASUS ROG, MSI, etc. As you'll see from the 50-Series dimensions table below.

  RTX 5090 RTX 5080 RTX 4070 Ti RTX 4070
Length 304mm 304mm Varies by manufacturer 242mm
Width 137mm     137mm     Varies by manufacturer 112mm
Slot 2-Slot 2-Slot Varies by manufacturer 2-Slot
50 series blackwell DLSS features

RTX 50 Series features

The 50 Series are not just about pure unbridled compute horsepower, however. DLSS's various methods of improving performance are greatly improved with a 50-Series GPU, and Multi Frame Generation (Explained below), is exclusive to the 50-Series.

What is NVIDIA DLSS 4?

DLSS 4 is the newest iteration of NVIDIA's Deep Learning Super Sampling technology. Below you can see which DLSS 4 features each RTX generation gets, and afterwards we explain each one for you.

DLSS 4 specs

DLSS Multi frame generation

DLSS Multi Frame Generation basically uses AI to generate up to three frames per actual rendered frame in real-time. So, it’s not like the GPU is working overtime to manually render each frame, more like taking well-educated guesses in the moment and generating additional frames.

The long and short of this is that the 50 series is expected be able to use AI to up the FPS of many games, using DLSS 4. However, we’re yet to see what the gameplay experience is like outside of NVIDIA’s demo video of Cyberpunk 2077.

Multi Frame Generation is only available on 50-Series GPUs, however, so if this feature sounds like your bag, you'll need to get your pre-order ready.

DLSS Ray Reconstruction

This one does not directly create more frames with AI. This time, it’s all about the detail, and using AI to generate additional pixels “between sampled rays.”

To show this off, NVIDIA used Cyberpunk 2077 and the demonstration really does look impressive, with a noticeable upgrade as to the detail in reflections. Reflections of course being the things that ray tracing really do help to improve.

DLSS Super Resolution

Super Resolution is here for pure image quality without tanking the frame rate. Not more polygons or more detailed reflections and textures.

This uses the aforementioned AI to output a higher resolution image, intelligently creating the additional pixels from a low-resolution input. NVIDIA used God of War to show this off.

Deep learning Anti-Aliasing

This time NVIDIA is using the same AI technology that they used in the previous section: Super Resolution. However, this time it’s not using AI to turn a low-res image into something closer to 4K.

This time it stays at the native resolution you’re playing at, using the AI-created graphical headroom to help smooth out awkwardly jagged edges that older games in particular tend to be fraught with. We got to see No Man’s Sky exhibit this technology and this was the most immediately apparent improvement in image quality of the new DLSS 4 features for sure.

Even the AI-sceptics fearful of corrupting the true-nature of their videogames might find Deep Learning Anti-Aliasing hard to argue with.

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