Buying a new graphics card is an expensive and frustrating process in the year 2025. New GPUs are pricy, especially good ones, and that's if you can even find them listed for MSRP. Nvidia's solution, when it's not stealth launching new 50 series cards, is to go back to the old ways, and release yet another iteration of the 3050. And honestly? I think it's a pretty good idea.
We've been hearing rumours of a new from Nvidia for about a year now, though they're unclear as to whether we're looking at a mobile or desktop GPU. Mobile was the more likely route but has spotted a new listing in GPU-Z that shows support for an as of yet announced RTX 3050, brining back those desktop speculations.
In the notes the mystery card is referred to as the GeForce RTX 3050 A, which really doesn't tell us much at all. What we do know is this Nvidia GPU will be using the new in cards like the, and mobile cards like the GeForce RTX 4070 Mobile, and GeForce RTX 4070 Max-Q. If we're lucky the greater density featured in this AD106 silicon will give us a 3050 bursting with transistors and gaming power.
Nvidia could be using the newer dies just because [[link]] it's what it has available, or dumping the last of the AD106 silicon before it moves on to the next best thing. What we know of AD106 tells us it should be more than enough to handle a 3050, but it begs the question of what kind we can expect to see.
A new RTX 3050 A would put us up to a grand [[link]] total of five iterations of this card so far. In the first year we saw the 4 GB and 8 GB variations launch followed by another 8 GB using the same dies as the 4 GB model. Then last year we saw a , so I'm hoping for something a little shinier.
Given Nvidia are still calling this an RTX 3050, I don't [[link]] plan on getting my hopes up too high for this unit, but a chunky lovelace box isn't too much to ask. I'd like to see a 12 GB VRAM unit, another 8 GB doesn't feel worth it but I know it won't be worth going to the full 16 GB. If they can also give it the ability to run frame generation like the , then these could be a real winner.
The RTX 3050 currently sits at 5th place on , so we know gamers haven't given up on these little beasties yet. If Nvidia nails the price point for a new release, it could be that we see these continue to sit visibly on that list for years to come.
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