I think it's fair to say that a defining feature of the has been an overall lack of availability. Not a day goes by without me checking graphics card listings for new stock, only to be continually greeted with minimal available cards and some ludicrous prices as a result. However, according to known X leaker , Nvidia has begun using GDDR7 from SK Hynix for RTX 50-series cards, starting with the .
Nvidia recently started to use SK Hynix GDDR7 for the RTX50 Graphic Card. Started with RTX5070 first.
Should these reports turn out to be correct, however, that would mean that new graphics card stock (of the , at least) may be on its way at some point in the very near future.
Ifs, buts, and maybes. Still, Nvidia already has in place across its portfolio, including Samsung's eight-layer HBM3E memory used for low-tier AI processors sold to [[link]] the Chinese market and SK Hynix 12-layer HBM3E in its all-singing, all-dancing products.
If a hold up in Nvidia's consumer GPU supply chain was down to Samsung memory production, then clearing that bottleneck with an SK
Hynix solution would be a help to supply.
Samsung has previously admitted in the memory production arena, although this was more about meeting requirements for chip performance rather than satisfying overall supply. Still, one may affect the [[link]] other, of course, but this was in relation to HBM3E and not GDDR7 used in gaming cards.
And then there are tariffs to throw into the equation. Given that the Trump administration seems to on a daily basis at the moment, it's reasonable to think that a supplier switch might help Nvidia navigate some troubled waters, although both manufacturers primarily operate out of South Korea for GDDR7 production.
Supply chains are complicated things, though, and the great tariff wheel-of-fortune we all appear to be spinning on is more complex still.
Tech manufacturers the world over look to be considering their options at the moment, and the question of who makes what and ships it [[link]] from where is an ever-present one when producing any product in these troubled times.
Anyway, more GPU supply sounds like a good thing to me. At the very least, an influx of RTX 50-series cards might get the market moving back in the right direction, by which I mean, gamers being able to purchase a new GPU for a reasonable amount of money. Wouldn't that be nice?