Samsung prepares to unleash even faster GDDR7 VRAM early in 2025 – rocket fuel for Nvidia’s RTX 5080 Ti, perhaps?

GDDR7 video RAM is already fast, but Samsung just made it even faster

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.

Samsunghas announced that it’s cooked up some new faster GDDR7 video RAM that might just power upNvidia’s next-genBlackwell GPUsat some point next year.

The innovation comes in what Samsung boasts is the industry’s first 24Gb GDDR7 RAM, which builds on itsprevious 16Gb GDDR7 memory modules(the latter are strongly rumored to bedestined for Nvidia’s initial RTX 5000 GPUs).

Samsungnotesthat the new 24Gb GDDR7 is built on a (5th-generation) 10nm process, and that allows for cell density to be 50% better in the same package size versus its predecessor. With 24Gb VRAM we can have memory modules of 3GB capacity (rather than 2GB modules as with 16Gb GDDR7).

Not only do we get that capacity benefit, but this VRAM is much faster, offering a speed of 40Gbps, we’re told. For context, the GDDR7 memory currently in the works boasts speeds of either 28Gbps or 32Gbps, so this is a leap of 25% on the latter. Samsung also notes that performance could be pepped up to 42.5Gbps in certain use cases, too.

Another noteworthy addition to the list of improvements with GDDR7 is better power-efficiency to the tune of 30%.

Samsung tells us that validation (testing and sampling) for this new RAM will begin later in 2024, and it’ll be deployed commercially early in 2025.

Analysis: A step forward for Samsung – and next-gen Nvidia Super (or Ti) GPUs too?

Analysis: A step forward for Samsung – and next-gen Nvidia Super (or Ti) GPUs too?

While 24Gb GDDR7 is expected to be a major boon for heavyweight applications (AI, data centers and so forth), it will also likely find a home in consumer graphics cards – at least to some extent.

Get the best Black Friday deals direct to your inbox, plus news, reviews, and more.

Get the best Black Friday deals direct to your inbox, plus news, reviews, and more.

Sign up to be the first to know about unmissable Black Friday deals on top tech, plus get all your favorite TechRadar content.

While all this remains speculation, Nvidia is expected to use 28Gbps (and 32Gbps) GDDR7 in its next-gen Blackwell graphics cards, leaving the possibility that Team Green may adopt this supercharged 40Gbps VRAM at some point. For an RTX 5090 Ti, perhaps? It’d obviously have to be a high-end graphics card, though we guess another possibility is an RTX 5080 Ti or Super (perhaps the rumored 24GB of VRAM spin on the 5080– given the 3GB module capacity, as mentioned).

What aboutAMDorIntelusing GDDR7? Rumors aroundAMD’s RDNA 4 GPUsinsist that Team Red won’t be making the leap to GDDR7, and instead will stick with current GDDR6, which makes sense given that the next-gen RX 8000 graphics cards are supposedly topping out at the mid-range. AMD will want to make them competitive in this space, no doubt, and steering away from cutting-edge VRAM seems like a plan in terms of keeping costs down, if this is the overall idea.

As for Intel, 2nd-gen Arc Battlemage graphics cards arerumored to be low-end only, so clearly GDDR7 won’t be on the table for those GPUs. It seems only Nvidia is jumping on the next-gen VRAM bandwagon next year, although even that remains a rumor – and we don’t know if Team Green will push as hard as deploying this faster 40Gbps memory in its Blackwell GPUs in 2025 (but we can hope).

ViaWccftech

You might also like

Darren is a freelancer writing news and features for TechRadar (and occasionally T3) across a broad range of computing topics including CPUs, GPUs, various other hardware, VPNs, antivirus and more. He has written about tech for the best part of three decades, and writes books in his spare time (his debut novel - ‘I Know What You Did Last Supper’ - was published by Hachette UK in 2013).

Nvidia RTX 5090 Ti suddenly pops up – and RTX 6000 GPUs are mentioned in trademark filings too – but don’t get excited

Watch out, Nvidia - new benchmarks suggest Apple M4 Ultra could beat the mighty RTX 4090

Rising AI threats are making firms turn back to human intelligence