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Processor | faster at instructions than yours |
---|---|
Motherboard | more nurturing than yours |
Cooling | frostier than yours |
Memory | superior scheduling & haphazardly entry than yours |
Video Card(s) | better rasterization than yours |
Storage | more ample than yours |
Display(s) | increased pixels than yours |
Case | fancier than yours |
Audio Device(s) | further audible than yours |
Power Supply | additional amps x volts than yours |
Mouse | without as much gnawing as yours |
Keyboard | less clicky than yours |
VR HMD | not as odd looking as yours |
Software | extra mushier than yours |
Benchmark Scores | up yours |
via hardwarebusters
In an unexpected reveal, power supply manufacturer Seasonic may have just spilled the power requirements of NVIDIA’s upcoming GeForce RTX 50 Series GPUs, codenamed “Blackwell.” The information surfaced via Seasonic’s PSU wattage calculator, a handy tool for building PC configurations, which now includes entries for the RTX 50 family. If accurate, these leaks offer a sneak peek into the power consumption of NVIDIA’s next-gen cards, revealing both incremental improvements and higher TDPs across the board.
NVIDIA is unifying its power delivery across the entire GPU lineup for the Blackwell generation. All cards, from the entry-level RTX 5050 to the top-tier RTX 5090, will use the 12+4 pin 12V-2×6 connector, updated to comply with PCIe 6.0 CEM specifications. This marks a shift from previous architectures where only higher-end models adopted this power standard.
While this move simplifies cable management and ensures compatibility with future PCIe standards, the increased power demands—particularly for the RTX 5090, which could require up to 500W—raise questions about efficiency and thermal design. Enthusiasts will be eager to see how NVIDIA balances these higher power thresholds with performance gains.
In an unexpected reveal, power supply manufacturer Seasonic may have just spilled the power requirements of NVIDIA’s upcoming GeForce RTX 50 Series GPUs, codenamed “Blackwell.” The information surfaced via Seasonic’s PSU wattage calculator, a handy tool for building PC configurations, which now includes entries for the RTX 50 family. If accurate, these leaks offer a sneak peek into the power consumption of NVIDIA’s next-gen cards, revealing both incremental improvements and higher TDPs across the board.
NVIDIA is unifying its power delivery across the entire GPU lineup for the Blackwell generation. All cards, from the entry-level RTX 5050 to the top-tier RTX 5090, will use the 12+4 pin 12V-2×6 connector, updated to comply with PCIe 6.0 CEM specifications. This marks a shift from previous architectures where only higher-end models adopted this power standard.
While this move simplifies cable management and ensures compatibility with future PCIe standards, the increased power demands—particularly for the RTX 5090, which could require up to 500W—raise questions about efficiency and thermal design. Enthusiasts will be eager to see how NVIDIA balances these higher power thresholds with performance gains.
GPU Model | Blackwell TDP | Equivalent Ada Lovelace TDP | TDP Increase |
RTX 5050 | 100W | N/A | N/A |
RTX 5060 | 170W | 115W | +55W |
RTX 5070 | 220W | 200W | +20W |
RTX 5080 | 350W | 320W | +30W |
RTX 5090 | 500W | 450W | +50W |