At CES 2025, Nvidia showed off only the top end of its RTX 50 series laptop graphics cards, including the GeForce RTX 5090, RTX 5080, RTX 5070 Ti and RTX 5070. This potentially leaves room for the RTX 5060 Ti, RTX 5060 and RTX 5050. While the first one remains unconfirmed, Videocardz has spotted the remaining models on HP's website.
The RTX 5060 and RTX 5050 will supposedly power one of HP's Victus 16 gaming laptops. They will be paired with current and last-gen Raptor Lake chips like the Core 7 240H, Core 5 230H, Core i7-13620H and Core i5-13420H. Unsurprisingly, AMD models are nowhere to be seen. Some SKUs will pair the CPUs with previous-gen GeForce GPUs like the RTX 4050, RTX 3050 A and RTX 2050, too.
Unfortunately, the listing doesn't reveal the specs of either card. But if Ada Lovelace cards are anything to go by, the RTX 5060 and RTX 5050 will likely stick with 8 GB VRAM apiece. Rumour has it one (or both) of them could use GDDR6 instead of GDDR7 modules to cut costs. Either way, it will be a while before we see them in action because Nvidia still hasn't pushed the high-end RTX 50 laptop SKUs out of the door, supposedly due to performance issues.
Performance-wise, the RTX 5060 and RTX 5050 might not much offer in the way of a generational uplift. Once again, their fate will depend on how much power an OEM decides to set aside for the GPU. But, Nvidia's vast suite of software features like DLSS 4.0, and multi-frame generation will let gamers play most titles at respectable frame rates, at least at 1080p.