Skip to main content

The RTX 5090 might decimate your power supply

Fans on the Nvidia RTX 3080.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

If you thought the best graphics cards already drew a ton of power, you’re in for a rude awakening. A series of claims surrounding Nvidia’s upcoming RTX 50-series GPUs say that the next-gen cards will push power limits even further, with a flagship card like the RTX 5090 drawing as much as 600 watts.

Nvidia has yet to even announce RTX 50-series GPUs, but we’ve already seen some troubles with the Blackwell architecture the cards will use in the data center. Official details on the cards are few and far between, but a handful of sources now claim the RTX 5090 will push power limits beyond the 450W we saw with the RTX 4090 in the previous generation. The most recent speculation comes with well-known leaker kopite7kimi, who claimed on X (formerly Twitter) that the RTX 5090 will go up to 600W, while the RTX 5080 will require 400W.

Recommended Videos

I know you someone got the details of GeForce of Blackwell recently.
Both of them all have some increase in power consumption, with higher SKUs increasing more.

— kopite7kimi (@kopite7kimi) September 3, 2024

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

Neither figure is out of the question. The 16-pin power connector available on current Nvidia GPUs is capable of delivering up to 600W, and the RTX 4080 Super already claims 320W of your system’s power. Although not out of the question, neither figure is set in stone, either. A spec like power draw is very easy for Nvidia to adjust, even up to the moment before the GPUs launch.

Things like power and clock speed are dictated by the firmware that’s flashed onto a graphics card before it leaves the factory. Nvidia will need to define a power range to its partners like Asus, MSI, and Gigabyte, but it could very easily adjust the rated power for its RTX 50-series GPUs before release. Even if the figures kopite7kimi is saying are accurate now, they’re still subject to change.

It’s hard to nail down a single figure for power draw, as well. Nvidia uses TDP, or Thermal Design Power, for its graphics cards, but there are other metrics you can look at. Total Graphics Power, or TGP, normally shows up for laptop GPUs, for example, while Total Board Power, or TBP, is used to talk about what the board is capable of handling when elements like the VRAM are brought into the mix. The figures quoted by kopite7kimi don’t have an acronym attached, so it’s tough to say that the leaker is specifically referring to TDP.

Even so, other sources claim that Nvidia is indeed increasing the power requirements for its RTX 50-series GPUs. For instance, Seasonic briefly listed RTX 50-series GPUs in its power supply calculator, claiming that the RTX 5090 would require 500W and the RTX 5080 would require 350W. On the other hand, we’ve seen some companies claim weaker cards like the RTX 5060 will come with a power reduction.

Nvidia hasn’t said when RTX 50-series GPUs will show up. However, the company typically launches new generations every two years, placing the launch window some time at the end of 2024. Some leakers claim the launch could slip to 2025, but given what we know now, a window between later this year and early next year seems reasonable.

Jacob Roach
Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
Bad news for AMD? Nvidia might fast-track the RTX 50-series
Two RTX 4060 cards side by side

Things are finally about to start heating up for some of the best graphics cards. Although we're still in the dark about final release dates, both AMD and Nvidia are said to be launching new GPUs in the first quarter of 2025. However, a new leak tells us that Nvidia might try out a different approach with the RTX 50-series, and that's bound to put some pressure on AMD at the worst possible time.

What's new? We've already heard that Nvidia is likely to announce the RTX 5090 and the RTX 5080 at CES 2025, with its CEO Jensen Huang scheduled to hold a keynote during the event. However, the release dates for the rest of the lineup remained a mystery. Now, a previously reliable source sheds some light on the matter with potential details about the planned launch dates for the RTX 5070, RTX 5070 Ti, RTX 5060, and RTX 5060 Ti.

Read more
No, generative AI isn’t taking over your PC games anytime soon
Cyberpunk 2077 running on the Samsung Odyssey OLED G8.

Surprise -- the internet is upset. This time, it's about a recent article from PC Gamer on the future of generative AI in video games. It's a topic I've written about previously, and something that game companies have been experimenting with for more than a year, but this particular story struck a nerve.

Redditors used strong language like "pro-AI puff piece," PC Gamer itself issued an apology, and the character designer for Bioshock Infinite's Elizabeth called the featured image showing the character reimagined with AI a "half-assed cosplay." The original intent of the article is to glimpse into the future at what games could look like with generative AI, but without the tact or clear realization of how this shift affects people's jobs and their creative works.

Read more
25 years ago, Nvidia changed PCs forever
The GeForce 256 sitting next to a Half Life box.

Twenty-five years ago, Nvidia released the GeForce 256 and changed the face of PCs forever. It wasn't the first graphics card produced by Nvidia -- it was actually the sixth -- but it was the first that really put gaming at the center of Nvidia's lineup with GeForce branding, and it's the device that Nvidia coined the term "GPU" with.

Nvidia is celebrating the anniversary of the release, and rightfully so. We've come an unbelievable way from the GeForce 256 up to the RTX 4090, but Nvidia's first GPU wasn't met with much enthusiasm. The original release, which lines up with today's date, was for the GeForce 256 SDR, or single data rate. Later in 1999, Nvidia followed up with the GeForce 256 DDR, or dual data rate.

Read more