The second major rumor dropped by veteran-leaker, Kopite7kimi, today is that NVIDIA's next-gen GeForce RTX flagship based on the "Ada-Next" GPU architecture will be utilizing a massive 512-bit bus interface.
While NVIDIA is rumored to be axing its flagship GeForce RTX 4090 Ti GPU, it looks like the green team may already be working on a next-gen successor with the information highlighting a huge upgrade to the memory configuration. According to Kopite7kimi, the Ada-Next flagship gaming GPU, which is expected to arrive sometime in 2025, will be featuring a 512-bit bus interface & I'll explain why that's such a big deal.
Combined with multiple sources, I confirm the gaming flagship of Ada-next will have a 512-bit memory interface.
— kopite7kimi (@kopite7kimi) July 27, 2023
NVIDIA's GeForce gaming graphics card lineup including the brand new ones hasn't featured a memory configuration above 384-bit since the GeForce GTX 285 which was released all the way back in 2009. This is significant because having a 512-bit memory configuration essentially lets NVIDIA experiment with some massive memory capacities. Currently, the 384-bit bus graphics cards such as the RTX 4090 and RTX 6000 Ada feature up to 24 GB and 48 GB capacities. With a 512-bit bus interface, you can get 32 GB capacities and expand up to 64 GB capacities on a single card. That's a 33% increase in memory capacities.
Also, that's not even considering the newer 24 Gb GDDR7 modules which are being designed by DRAM makers including Micron and Samsung. If NVIDIA was to use these modules, you can even get up to 48/96 GB VRAM capacities which would be insane amounts and a big boost for content creators and AI workloads but I think gaming won't essentially take much advantage
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