Micron calls GDDR7 memory capacity a “performance bottleneck” as Nvidia’s RTX 50 SUPER series remains MIA
Micron calls GPU memory a “performance bottleneck” after Nvidia RTX Super delay/cancellation
With a new article on its website, Micron has called GPU memory a “new performance bottleneck”, stating that “increased capacity matters to gamers”. This follows widespread reports that Nvidia delayed or cancelled its enhanced RTX 50 SUPER series GPUs, all of which reportedly offered 50% more GDDR7 memory than their predecessors.
Micron’s article highlights its new 24Gb GDDR7 memory modules, which can run at up to 36 Gbps and offer 50% more memory capacity than its existing 16Gb GDDR7 modules. With its newest modules, Micron has delivered greater memory capacity and higher bandwidth. Great upgrades for anyone using these new modules.
If I am honest, Micron’s article is tone-deaf. It ignores the ongoing memory availability crisis and the fact that Nvidia aren’t expected to release new GPUs anytime soon. If anything, the article points out what gamers could have had if the AI industry and its rapid datacenter buildouts hadn’t destroyed the consumer electronics market.
Enabling larger, more detailed worlds with 24Gb density
As game environments expand and visual assets grow, memory capacity becomes critical to maintaining seamless, artifact-free experiences. Micron’s new 24Gb density enables up to 96GB of graphics memory, giving GPUs significantly more space for high-resolution textures, expansive worlds, and advanced visual effects.
This increased capacity matters to gamers because:
- Reduces asset swapping and texture pop-in
- Supports larger frame buffers for high-resolution displays
- Enables richer, more detailed environments with fewer loading transitions
Creators and professional users also benefit from faster real-time rendering, more responsive GPU-accelerated workflows, and improved handling of large datasets.
– Micron
What higher memory GPUs can do for gamers
With higher memory GPUs, Micron says that gamers can benefit from “richer, more detailed environments”, “fewer loading transitions”, and reduced “asset swapping and texture pop-in”. In other words, gamers will be better.
With GPUs like Nvidia’s RTX 5060 Ti and AMD’s Radeon RX 9060 XT, we already know that the 16GB versions of these GPUs are better than their 8GB counterparts. In modern games, 8GB GPUs deliver less performance than their 16GB counterparts and stutter more frequently. Independent testing has confirmed this.
Micron GDDR7 is more than a performance improvement, it is a foundational technology for the next decade of visual and AI computing. With 36 Gbps bandwidth, 24Gb density, and improved efficiency, GDDR7 empowers GPU and AI PC vendors to deliver richer, more dynamic, and more intelligent computing experiences.
– Micron
Did Micron just hint at Nvidia RTX 50 SUPER series GPUs?
In their article, Micron has mentioned the “next wave of discrete GPUs”, something that’s a possible reference to Nvidia’s RTX 50 SUPER series. Right now, these GPUs are not expected to launch anytime soon. It is possible that this article was pre-prepared and that Nvidia originally intended its RTX 50 SUPER series to have launched by now. Regardless, Micron’s article feels like a taunt for the PC hardware community. This is what you could have had if AI hadn’t messed up the memory market. Thanks Micron…
Together, Micron GDDR7 and the next wave of discrete GPUs set the stage for a new era of immersive graphics and high-performance AI computing.
– Micron
In case Micron deletes its article, I have saved it on archive.org. It presents clear evidence that someone planned to release gaming GPUs with 24Gb GDDR7 memory modules. Since Nvidia is the only gaming GPU company to use GDDR7, it is likely that these GPUs are Nvidia’s long-rumoured RTX 50 SUPER series.
Last year, Micron killed its Crucial consumer memory and storage brand to focus on AI. As such, there isn’t much love for Micron from PC enthusiasts right now. Their GPU memory “performance bottleneck” article only adds insult to injury. The memory shortage has deprived us of higher-memory GPUs. Thanks AI…
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