Tuesday, June 27th 2023

NVIDIA Ada Lovelace Successor Set for 2025

According to the NVIDIA roadmap that was spotted in the recently published MLCommons training results, the Ada Lovelace successor is set to come in 2025. The roadmap also reveals the schedule for Hopper Next and Grace Next GPUs, as well as the BlueField-4 DPU.

While the roadmap does not provide a lot of details, it does give us a general idea of when to expect NVIDIA's next GeForce architecture. Since NVIDIA usually launches a new GeForce architecture every two years or so, the latest schedule might sound like a small delay, at least if it plans to launch the Ada Lovelace Next in early 2025 and not later. NVIDIA Pascal was launched in May 2016, Turing in September 2018, Ampere in May 2020, and Ada Lovelace in October 2022.
NVIDIA now has a full lineup of GeForce RTX 40 series graphics cards, with some possible future Ti versions. After all, we have just seen the 4-slot cooler for the possible NVIDIA RTX 4090 Ti or TITAN Ada. It is also possible that NVIDIA could launch a refresh at some point next year.

The Grace Next is also scheduled to launch in 2025, and Hopper Next, rumored to be called Blackwell, is coming in the first half of 2024. The same goes for the BlueField-4 DPU, which is also set for 2024.
Source: HardwareLuxx
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85 Comments on NVIDIA Ada Lovelace Successor Set for 2025

#1
TumbleGeorge
What a... Wait for moment. A 3 year between generations? This is pathetic. I remember times when see new generations every year. Not so long ago. :(
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#2
R0H1T
That must've been eons ago because I don't remember two new gens in two years since I started following AT or TPU more than a decade back!
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#3
Haziza
TumbleGeorgeWhat a... Wait for moment. A 3 year between generations? This is pathetic. I remember times when see new generations every year. Not so long ago. :(
Early 2025 hopefully.
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#4
N/A
early 2025 means 2.5 years, Could be january,
Im already salivating over a RTX 5080 16GB 1152 GBs 17920 Cuda 390 mm2.
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#5
katzi
Totally predicting a 40-super series, with all the GPUs having at least 16GB ram, bumped clocks and mildly higher power limits.
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#6
Haziza
N/Aearly 2025 means 2.5 years, Could be january,
Im already salivating over a RTX 5080 16GB 1152 GBs 17920 Cuda 390 mm2.
What planet do you live on?
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#7
Tomgang
For some time, it has been just around 2 years between new gen of gpu.

I dont complain throw. Since spent a good amount of money on my rtx 4090. It would be nice to get a longer run out of it before replacing it.
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#8
wNotyarD
Come RTX 5000 or whatever, I don't see myself passing my 3070 ahead yet.
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#9
N/A
24 months is time needed to develop the new architecture on the same node or the old on a new node or maybe both. Nothing wrong with it not happening in exactly that timeframe. Unless you are a control freak. this means the the 60 series will come sooner though since they never skipped a beat. yeah I live on this planet and I observed 4080 took after the 3090 so logically 5080 is a shrink of the 4090, the worst case 14080 15360 Cuda or 110-120 SMs, but that's irrelevant since it doesn't have that big of an effect on performance. The important thing is to get those VRAMs up to 32GB asap.
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#10
droopyRO
N/AThe important thing is to get those VRAMs up to 32GB asap.
Not for gaming.
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#11
TumbleGeorge
R0H1TThat must've been eons ago because I don't remember two new gens in two years since I started following AT or TPU more than a decade back!
Hm, yes a little before that :)
The Radeon HD 3850 was a mid-range graphics card by ATI, launched on November 19th, 2007
Radeon HD 4870 & 4850 were released in June 2008
Ups there is only 7 months between. My wrong. Sorry!
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#12
RH92
TumbleGeorgeWhat a... Wait for moment. A 3 year between generations? This is pathetic. I remember times when see new generations every year. Not so long ago. :(
It's been every two years since 2010 so yeah . I mean if 5000s brings x2 uplift over the 4000s in both raster and AI ( which is what most leakers claim) then i can wait an additional year it's not going to change much . On top of that we will have more mature N3 from TSMC by that time.
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#13
neatfeatguy
They are not moving the current gen. I can see why they want to wait - hopefully people will need to upgrade before the next gen comes out in 2025 to help clear out inventory so they can recoup their money. Folks sitting on 10xx series and maybe even 20xx series may need to upgrade before 2025. If that's the case, their only option is used 30xx series or new Ada cards on the shelf that just aren't moving right now.
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#14
RH92
m2geekTotally predicting a 40-super series, with all the GPUs having at least 16GB ram, bumped clocks and mildly higher power limits.
Don't see that happening since they have no competition and they have 4000s stock to move . They can hold up to 2025 with their current lineup maybe release a 4090Ti ( but not really needed unless threatened by AMD ) and do some price drops through 2024 to move stock hence why they are delaying 5000s imo .
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#15
mama
If AMD keep to their expected release for 8000 series gpus that means it will be competing with Nvidia 4000 series. Maybe this will give them a leg up, especially if they can perfect the chiplet design.
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#16
TumbleGeorge
RH92It's been every two years since 2010
My bad memory. Propably you is right?
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#17
Hyderz
thats only like a year and a half to go, but need game developers to really push the current games hardwares boundaries
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#18
Count von Schwalbe
Nocturnus Moderatus
droopyRONot for gaming.
Not until next year at least, maybe even 2026
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#19
ModEl4
Nvidia in order to extract as many financial gains as it can, it needs to start the launch procedure from the high end.The problem for this scenario lies with what kind of CPU power level it needs in order to sufficiently differentiate the 102 based model (eg. 5090) vs the 103 based one (eg. 5080) (also vs a future 4090Ti...) Already 11GPCs with 512TCs active at 4K raster bring only +26% performance gain in relation with 7GPCs with 304TCs active.This phenomenon is only going to get worse in the future so the actual cycles to get longer eventually isn't out of the realm of possibility.I wonder what CPU launch Nvidia will choose to corelate their ada-next launch.In any case despite the supposed 2025 launch, i doubt the successor is going to be 3nm based on the kind of L2 Nvidia has, it should be an Nvidia-specific optimized 4nm version and I think we are going to have again a monolithic design, but we will see.
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#20
sn2x
Hoping for H1 2025. I got a 4070 at launch a few months ago so I should be able to get a full 2 years out of it before the 5070 arrives.
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#21
AusWolf
NVIDIA now has a full lineup of GeForce RTX 40 series graphics cards, with some possible future Ti versions.
Huh? Where's the 4050, or a 4030?
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#22
oxrufiioxo
AusWolfHuh? Where's the 4050
They renamed it the 4060....
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#23
N/A
There will most certainly be a 4050, a slightly slower 107 die, since 4060 is the full die and that is impossible to maintain at high yields. even the 4080 is gimped by 4 SMs. So stop with the renaming interpretations already. It's the new normal. As far as we know the only renamed card is the 4080 12, the rest is as intended. Just buy and have fun. Until 2025 who knows what could happen.
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#24
ZoneDymo
TomgangFor some time, it has been just around 2 years between new gen of gpu.

I dont complain throw. Since spent a good amount of money on my rtx 4090. It would be nice to get a longer run out of it before replacing it.
You act as if newer cards mean you HAVE to upgrade
N/AThere will most certainly be a 4050, a slightly slower 107 die, since 4060 is the full die and that is impossible to maintain at high yields. even the 4080 is gimped by 4 SMs. So stop with the renaming interpretations already. It's the new normal. As far as we know the only renamed card is the 4080 12, the rest is as intended. Just buy and have fun. Until 2025 who knows what could happen.
Non of what you stated is the reason people are reluctant to buy...
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#25
Pumper
neatfeatguyThey are not moving the current gen. I can see why they want to wait - hopefully people will need to upgrade before the next gen comes out in 2025 to help clear out inventory so they can recoup their money. Folks sitting on 10xx series and maybe even 20xx series may need to upgrade before 2025. If that's the case, their only option is used 30xx series or new Ada cards on the shelf that just aren't moving right now.
Yeah, seems like the current strategy is "you don't want our overpriced 4000 series? well we will not be releasing new GPUs until you buy all the trash and thank us for it, then".
Posted on Reply
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