Nvidia: 50+ Million Gamers Still Using x50 And x60 GPUs From Pascal, Turing And Ampere Generations

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While Marketing RTX 5050, Nvidia Also Proved The Popularity Of 1050 and 1650 GPUs!

Story Highlight
  • A new Nvidia graph for RTX 5050 shows that 50+ million gamers are using x50 and x60 GPUs from the Pascal, Turing, and Ampere eras. 
  • The graph shows RTX 5050 delivers over 60 times the performance of 10xx and 16xx series x50/x60 GPUs.
  • Keep in mind that DLSS was enabled on the RTX 5050.

After Nvidia’s high-end 50xx variants began entering the market early this year, it has now also just revealed a more budget-friendly yet high-performance variant, the awaited RTX 5050. The company is now marketing and promoting the GPU with performance metrics.

In one of these new graphs, Nvidia highlights that the RTX 5050 performs over 50 times better against the x50 and x60 GPUs from the Pascal (GTX 10xx), Turing (GTX 16xx), and Ampere (RTX 30xx) generations.

However, the chart also highlights that 50+ million gamers are still using the x50 and x60 GPUs from these early three generations. 

Why it matters: This chart shows Nvidia’s budget GPUs are still in high demand, even though they are generations older.

The RTX 5050 apparently offers over 50x the performance compared to the GTX 1050 and 1650 GPUs.

The graph compares the DLSS-enabled RTX 5050 against the 1050 and 1650—which have no DLSS support—and with the rest of the GPUs in the x50 and x60 series. The Ryzen 9800X3D CPU, along with a suite of 20 games, was used at 1080p high settings for comparison. 

The results of the chart are not surprising, given how old the Pascal, Turing, and Ampere architectures are.

However, something that caught everyone’s attention is Nvidia implying that tens of millions of gamers are still using the x50 and x60 GPUs from these generations instead of switching over to the newer 40xx and 50xx iterations.

RTX 5050 offers 4x the boost in performance of RTX 3050 with DLSS 4 turned on in modern games.

Many factors, such as high costs and less significant performance gains in RTX 40xx and 50xx cards compared to the 30xx generation, have played a big role in keeping gamers from switching over. Anyhow, Nvidia is set to launch RTX 5050 in July 2025 with an MSRP of $249.

Do you think that Nvidia’s graph proves that the x50 and x60 GPUs from the early generations are still in such high demand? Let us know your thoughts in the comments below, or join the discussion on the Tech4Gamers forum.

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