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The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5050 is built on the advanced Blackwell 2.0 architecture, utilizing the GB207 graphics processor (variant GB207-300-A1). Manufactured on TSMC's 4N (5 nm) process, this GPU features 2560 shading units, 80 texture mapping units (TMUs), and 32 ROPs for rendering performance. It also includes dedicated hardware acceleration with 80 Tensor Cores (5th Gen) for AI tasks and 20 Ray Tracing Cores (4th Gen) for realistic lighting effects.
Supporting DirectX 12 Ultimate, the RTX 5050 is ready for all modern games and future titles, enabling features like hardware-accelerated ray tracing and variable-rate shading.
The RTX 5050 comes equipped with 8 GB of GDDR6 memory connected via a 128-bit bus, providing a memory bandwidth of 224.0 GB/s. The GPU operates with a base clock speed of 2317 MHz and a boost clock of up to 2572 MHz, while the memory runs at an effective speed of 14 Gbps.
Recommended for gaming resolutions including 1920x1080 (Full HD), 2560x1440 (QHD), and capable of handling 3840x2160 (4K) in certain scenarios, the RTX 5050 delivers strong performance within the performance segment.
Designed as a dual-slot graphics card, the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5050 requires one 8-pin power connector for operation. Its Thermal Design Power (TDP) is rated at 130 W, with a suggested system power supply unit (PSU) of 300 W.
Connectivity options include three DisplayPort 2.1b outputs and one HDMI 2.1b output, allowing connection to multiple high-resolution displays. The card connects to the system motherboard via a PCI-Express 5.0 x8 interface.
Key graphics APIs supported by the RTX 5050 include DirectX 12 Ultimate (Feature Level 12_2), OpenGL 4.6, OpenCL 3.0, Vulkan 1.4, and CUDA 12.0, with Shader Model 6.8.
It features 4th generation Ray Tracing Cores, 5th generation Tensor Cores, 9th generation NVENC encoder, 6th generation NVDEC decoder, and supports PureVideo HD (VP11) and VDPAU (Feature Set K) for video acceleration, providing comprehensive support for gaming, rendering, and media processing.