

There are also likely to be intermediate cards that aren't in that table. Nvidia hasn't officially revealed even the existence of these cards, and it won't until they're close to release. The last three cards require some generous helpings of salt, as they're more speculation than anything concrete. The first three cards are now official and the specs are fully accurate. Let's start with the high level overview of the specs and rumored specs for the Ada series of GPUs.

RTX 4070 may arrive in early 2023, and RTX 40 will likely come later next year. RTX 4080 16GB and 12GB models will arrive in November, though beyond that things get a little misty. If Nvidia follows a similar release schedule as in the past, we can expect the rest of the RTX 40-series to trickle out over the next year. With the Ada whitepaper now available, we've updated the information here to cover exactly what we can expect from the new generation of GPUs.

Nvidia detailed its data center Hopper H100 GPU, and much like with the Volta V100 and Ampere A100, the consumer products will have rather different configurations. There are still plenty of rumors swirling around, but we now have a much better idea of what to expect from the Ada Lovelace architecture. We've collected everything into this central hub detailing everything we know and expect from Nvidia's Ada architecture and the RTX 40-series family. With the Nvidia hack earlier this year, we had a good amount of information on what to expect, and Nvidia has now confirmed most of the details on the first RTX 40-series cards. That's two years after the Nvidia Ampere architecture and basically right on schedule given the slowing down (or if you prefer, death) of Moore's 'Law,' and it's good news as the best graphics cards are in need of some new competition. Nvidia's Ada architecture and GeForce RTX 40-series graphics cards are slated to begin arriving on October 12, starting with the GeForce RTX 4090 and RTX 4080.
