The anticipation surrounding Nvidia’s upcoming RTX 50-series is palpable, yet GPU manufacturers are already looking further ahead. A recent trademark filing with the Eurasian Economic Commission (EEC) reveals a glimpse into the future, mentioning not only the RTX 5090 and an RTX 5090 Ti, but also an RTX 6090 Ti. While the RTX 60-series is still years away, this filing provides intriguing insights into what might be in store.
The trademark registration, initially discovered by harukaze5719 on X (formerly Twitter) and reported by VideoCardz, originates from Sinotex International Industrial Ltd., the company behind the Ninja GPU brand. While Ninja currently holds a smaller market share, particularly in the U.S., this filing suggests ambitious plans. It encompasses the entire projected RTX 50-series lineup, including potential models ranging from the RTX 5050 (with Ti and Super variants) all the way up to the RTX 5090 Ti (or potentially an RTX 5090 Super). Interestingly, the absence of “Ti Super” variants suggests this naming convention might be discontinued after the current-gen RTX 4070 Ti Super.
EEC filing for the RTX 6090.
The EEC filing also includes the entire projected RTX 60-series lineup, from the RTX 6050 up to the RTX 6070 and RTX 6090, each with potential Super and Ti versions. While these GPUs are likely based on the Rubin architecture, details remain scarce, and a release before late 2026 or 2027 is unlikely. It’s important to note that this trademark filing doesn’t confirm the release of every listed GPU; it primarily serves to secure the naming rights. However, the timing of the filing coincides with increasing speculation about the imminent RTX 50-series launch.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang is scheduled to deliver a keynote at CES 2025 in January, and hardware leaker kopite7kimi has hinted at the Blackwell architecture’s impending arrival. The RTX 5090 and RTX 5080 are expected to be the first releases, with the RTX 5070 as a possibility. As for the trademarked RTX 5090 Ti, if it does materialize, its launch would likely be several months to a year later.
While the future of Nvidia’s GPU lineup remains uncertain, this trademark filing provides a tantalizing glimpse into potential developments. While the RTX 60-series is still far off, the anticipation for the RTX 50-series continues to build.