It was reported a few days ago that the GeForce RTX 50 SUPER series may face further delays due to recent DRAM price increases and supply shortages. What's worse is that if this DRAM market continues, this mid-term upgrade product may even be canceled, and Nvidia will put resources into products with higher profit margins.

According to Benchlife, although news about the GeForce RTX 50 SUPER series spread as early as June this year, Nvidia actually did not explicitly mention these products to partners. As of November, Nvidia has not sent information to any graphics card manufacturer, so there is no cancellation or delay.
However, based on NVIDIA's past new product release rhythm, combined with the product design and production cycle, overall the GeForce RTX 50 SUPER series is unlikely to arrive in the first quarter of 2026, and even the possibility of launch in the second quarter is low. It is rumored that the release time may be set at the end of the second quarter or the beginning of the third quarter, but at least it will have to wait until Nvidia releases design information to confirm.
Since the release of the GeForce RTX 50 series based on the Blackwell architecture, the supply of GDDR7 memory particles has been in a state of greater demand than supply, regardless of 16Gb (2GB) or 24Gb (3GB) GDDR7 modules. At the same time, NVIDIA currently has no rivals in the gaming graphics card market and has a huge lead. With such a high market share, there is no need to rush to take action.