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Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 release date, price and specs: all the RTX 3080 rumors

With the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 and the RTX 3000 line supposedly coming this year, rumors, leaks and speculations are unsurprisingly piling up for Nvidia’s next-generation GPUs. Those include a possible first look and a chance that Nvidia could make the RTX 3080 an AMD Big Navi killer.

The RTX 3080 might only be a rumor for now, but leaks regarding Nvidia Ampere have been rampant, many of those speculating that it might be the graphics architecture for this upcoming slate of consumer GPUs. Now, Nvidia has recently announced Ampere for Data Center, much in the same way it did when Nvidia Volta preceded the Nvidia Turing graphics cards, with no mention of PC gaming or GeForce. However, that doesn’t mean that we won’t actually see the GeForce RTX 3080 this year.

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has already said that the 7nm Ampere microarchitecture will be used for all of its next-generation graphics cards, which means that the next GeForce cards will be Ampere-based as well. With AIB partners said to be clearing out their stock to prepare for an Nvidia Ampere launch and a new report saying that both AMD and Nvidia will release their next generation graphics cards in September, it’s likely we’ll be seeing these cards on the shelves by October.

We’re only months away now from the RTX 3000’s rumored release date, so we thought we’d gather everything we know and have heard so far about these next generation RTX GPUs from AMD. Keep this page bookmarked to learn what’s in store for Nvidia’s upcoming line of GPUs, as we’re keeping abreast of all the rumors, leaks, speculation and gossip, and will continue to update it.

Cut to the chase

  • What is it? The next Nvidia GeForce flagship
  • When is it out? Possibly in August 2020
  • How much is it? Likely around the same price as the Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080

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RTX 3080 release date

For a while, the rumor mill was suggesting that we’re going to see the next GeForce lineup make an appearance at GTC, or the GPU Technology Conference in March. But, Nvidia has since canceled its ‘exciting’ GTC graphics card revelations. Since then, Nvidia has officially announced the Nvidia Ampere for Data Center. And, as expected, it did so before the RTX 3000 lineup, just like when it launched Volta in May 2017 more than a year before Turing.

Luckily, it doesn’t seem like we have to wait until 2021 to get a glimpse of the next generation RTX cards. In the past, Nvidia GeForce lineups have been about two years apart. For instance, the Nvidia GeForce GTX 1080 dropped back in May 2016, with the GeForce RTX 2080 succeeding it in August 2018. The time between the GTX 980 and GTX 1080 was a bit shorter, with the former arriving in September 2014. Still as a general rule, we’ve been able to historically count on there being a new lineup of graphics cards every couple of years.

Tweaktown has reported that Nvidia plans to unveil the Ampere GPU architecture in August this year and launch it in September at Computex 2020. This is highly likely, as it’s similar to how Nvidia launched Turing at Gamescom back in August 2018, and would mark a straight 2-year cycle for the current-generation cards. Furthermore, AIB partners are said to be clearing out their stock now, allegedly in preparation for an Nvidia Ampere launch in Q3 2020.

We’ve also heard that the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 Ti, which may be up to 40% faster than its predecessor and run with hugely fast boost clocks of up to 2.2GHz as well as 18Gbps video memory, could launch by the end of 2020. With how these things typically go, we won’t actually know when the RTX 3080 is on its way until Nvidia is ready. In fact, we won’t know if it’ll even be called the RTX 3080.

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RTX 3080 price

Because we’re so far out from a potential GeForce RTX 3080 release, we obviously have no idea how much it will cost. But, that doesn’t mean we can’t do a bit of speculation about it.

Nvidia Turing graphics cards saw a large price jump over their Pascal predecessors, and we’d almost expect the same to happen with whatever comes next. However, we have heard some rumors that suggest that the next-generation graphics cards will be more affordable. That said, this rumor revolves around another rumor that the cards will be manufactured using Samsung 7nm EUV (extreme ultraviolet) manufacturing process. We’d take that one with a grain of salt.

One thing that absolutely needs to be taken into consideration when talking about RTX 3080 price is ‘Big Navi’. When Nvidia Turing hit the streets it was basically completely unopposed by AMD. Even when Team Red dropped the Radeon VII in February 2019 it was totally incapable of dethroning the RTX 2080. Competition has definitely heated up since then, though.

Both the Radeon RX 5700 series and the Radeon RX 5600 XT have caused Nvidia to drop prices in response, and the threat of ‘Big Navi’ supposedly beating the RTX 2080 Ti by 30% could force Nvidia to drop its prices to compete. Still, we won’t know the RTX 3080’s price until we see Nvidia lift the veil – or at least until more substantial leaks surface.

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RTX 3080 specs

We have seen a lot of really vague speculation and rumors surrounding supposed RTX 3080 specs, but there are some constants: that it’ll be 7nm and will be faster than the RTX 2080. That second one should be super obvious, of course – why would Nvidia put out new graphics cards if they’re not significantly faster?

The other rumor, the 7nm manufacturing process, is much more interesting. If you’ve been following the AMD vs Intel smackdown over the last year, you’re probably aware that one of the things that’s kept AMD on top of the CPU world is the fact that it’s been able to fully adopt 7nm while Intel, at least when it comes to desktop, being stuck at 14nm. If Nvidia is able to adopt a 7nm manufacturing process for the RTX 3080, AMD won’t have such an easy time dunking on it.

If these rumors are actually true, it would mean that Nvidia could significantly boost performance – up to 50% according to some rumors – while boosting power efficiency significantly. When combined with DLSS, which will absolutely be a part of whatever graphics cards Nvidia puts out next, could potentially lead to 4K graphics cards being available in the mid-range sector for the first time.

All that power requires a much more efficient cooling system, so recently leaked images showing a prototype of the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 with a striking new fan design is naturally making rounds.

Hardware leaker kopite7kimi has also speculated the RTX 3080 might use the GA102-200 GPU, and that there may just be an RTX 3090 graphics card backing it up. If this educated guesswork holds water, we could be looking at an AMD Big Navi killer.

Exactly how much faster and more powerful the RTX 3080 would be, it’s too early to tell. There’s a Nvidia GPU with a whopping 33 teraflops, 24GB of memory and 1.11GHz clock that was recently spotted in a benchmark, as well as another one with 124 compute units. While these may be too powerful to be the RTX 3080, they could also hint towards what the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 may look like.

We have even seen some more specific spec leaks, notably one from hardware leaker KittyCorgi, who suggests that Nvidia’s next-generation flagship could potentially come with up to 20GB of VRAM. Of course, this is a leak we’d take with a hefty dose of salt, but it could potentially prove our theory that the next graphics architecture Nvidia announces will in fact be for professionals. The Quadro RTX 6000, for instance, packs 24GB of GDDR6 – but it also costs $4,000 (£4,066, AU$6,999).

Right now, if we had to put our money down, we’d suggest that these leaked specs are for an Nvidia Quadro or Tesla card, or maybe even the follow-up to the Nvidia Titan V. Whatever the GeForce RTX 3080 looks like, we seriously doubt we’ve seen it yet.

Meanwhile, a massive leak from Moore’s Law is Dead reveals a GA102 GPU that will theoretically be Nvidia’s top-end Ampere consumer offering. It’s highly likely going to be named the RTX 3080 Ti, and looks to be an out-and-out beast of a graphics card with hugely fast boost clocks of up to 2.2GHz, offering 21 TFlops of raw performance, 18Gbps video memory – 864GB/s of memory bandwidth, around 40% more than the 2080 Ti (at 616GB/s), and PCIe 4.0 support.

Other lesser graphics cards in the 3000 range have been revealed as well, and they may push those boost clocks to 2.5GHz. Moore’s Law is Dead argues that 4K graphics will become the mainstream standard with these new Ampere models, and we might be looking at the future of gaming on PC coming in 4K.

Don’t worry, though. We’ll keep our eyes open for the next generation of GeForce, and we’ll be sure to update this article as soon as we see any juicy RTX 3080 spec rumors.

Source: techradar.com


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