Seasonic PSU Calculator Leaks RTX 50 Super GPUs With Higher Power Draw
Rumors surrounding NVIDIA’s GeForce RTX 50 Super lineup have taken another turn after new information surfaced through Seasonic’s online power supply calculator. The update appears to reference three unannounced Super-series graphics cards, each carrying noticeably higher Total Graphics Power (TGP) ratings than their standard RTX 50 counterparts.
Although NVIDIA has not confirmed the existence of these products, the leak has reignited speculation that the RTX 50 Super family may still be on the company’s roadmap despite earlier reports suggesting the refresh had been delayed indefinitely.
π Seasonic Listing Revives RTX 50 Super Speculation #
Over the past several months, multiple reports suggested that NVIDIA had postponed the GeForce RTX 50 Super series without announcing a revised launch window.
Additional rumorsβincluding the reported cancellation of an RTX 5050 9GB variant and changes to NVIDIA’s longer-term desktop GPU roadmapβfurther fueled uncertainty about whether a mid-generation refresh would arrive at all.
The appearance of new GPU entries inside Seasonic’s official PSU calculator has now shifted the conversation once again.
While power supply calculators are designed to help users estimate system power requirements, manufacturers often update their hardware compatibility databases before new products become publicly available. As a result, these tools have occasionally revealed unreleased hardware specifications ahead of official announcements.
At this stage, however, the information should still be treated as unconfirmed. The entries could represent:
- Internal testing data
- Placeholder specifications
- Preliminary engineering targets
- Future product plans that may still change
Until NVIDIA formally announces the products, neither the specifications nor the launch timeline can be considered final.
β‘ Three RTX 50 Super Models Appear in the Leak #
According to the Seasonic listing, the initial RTX 50 Super lineup would consist of three desktop GPUs:
- RTX 5080 Super
- RTX 5070 Ti Super
- RTX 5070 Super
Notably, no RTX 5060 Super appears in the current database, suggesting NVIDIA may initially focus on the upper midrange and enthusiast segments.
If accurate, the absence of an entry-level Super model would mirror a strategy that prioritizes higher-margin products before expanding the lineup.
π Leaked Power Consumption Figures #
The most striking aspect of the leak is the substantial increase in GPU power consumption across all three models.
| Graphics Card | Standard TGP | Leaked Super TGP | Increase |
|---|---|---|---|
| RTX 5080 | 360W | 415W | +55W |
| RTX 5070 Ti | 300W | 350W | +50W |
| RTX 5070 | 250W | 275W | +25W |
Compared with previous NVIDIA Super refreshes, these increases are unusually large.
During the GeForce RTX 40 Super generation, TGP increases generally ranged between 15W and 20W. By comparison, the rumored RTX 50 Super cards would introduce significantly larger jumps, particularly for the RTX 5080 Super and RTX 5070 Ti Super.
π What Higher TGP Could Indicate #
Power consumption alone does not determine GPU performance, but substantial TGP increases often accompany meaningful hardware upgrades.
Historically, NVIDIA’s Super-series products have included enhancements such as:
- Additional CUDA cores
- More RT cores
- Increased Tensor core counts
- Faster memory configurations
- Higher memory bandwidth
Maintaining similar operating frequencies while enabling more execution units naturally increases overall board power.
If the leaked figures are accurate, they may suggest that the RTX 50 Super lineup offers more than a minor specification refresh.
Instead of modest adjustments, NVIDIA could be preparing significantly more capable versions of its existing Blackwell-based GPUs.
π PSU Requirements May Increase #
Higher GPU power consumption also affects overall system requirements.
Users considering one of the rumored Super models should evaluate whether their existing power supply provides sufficient headroom for:
- GPU peak power draw
- CPU boost behavior
- Peripheral expansion
- Future upgrades
Although NVIDIA’s official PSU recommendations remain unknown, a 50W to 55W increase in GPU power consumption could push some existing systems beyond their recommended operating margins.
Builders planning to upgrade from a standard RTX 50-series card should verify:
- PSU rated wattage
- 12V rail capacity
- Availability of appropriate PCIe power connectors
- Overall system power budget under sustained gaming or compute workloads
π§ Why This Leak Matters #
Hardware compatibility databases maintained by companies such as Seasonic, motherboard vendors, and system integrators have previously revealed unreleased CPUs and GPUs before official announcements.
However, these listings are not always definitive.
Possible explanations include:
- Early engineering samples
- Internal product planning
- Marketing preparation
- Database testing
- Specifications that may change before launch
For that reason, the reported TGP values should be viewed as indicators rather than confirmed product specifications.
π Final Thoughts #
The latest Seasonic PSU calculator update has renewed speculation surrounding NVIDIA’s GeForce RTX 50 Super family after months of conflicting reports about its future.
If the leaked information proves accurate, the first wave of Super models would include the RTX 5080 Super, RTX 5070 Ti Super, and RTX 5070 Super, each featuring noticeably higher power budgets than their standard counterparts. Such increases could point to more substantial hardware upgrades than previous Super refreshes, potentially delivering meaningful performance gains at the cost of higher system power requirements.
Until NVIDIA makes an official announcement, however, these specifications remain part of the ongoing rumor cycle. Enthusiasts planning future GPU upgrades should keep an eye on official product announcements while ensuring their current power supplies can accommodate the possibility of significantly higher TGP requirements.