Coinciding with today’s launch of Intel’s Tiger Lake-H CPUs for high performance laptops, NVIDIA is also using the occasion to launch their latest lineup of laptop video cards, the GeForce RTX 3050 and RTX 3050 Ti For Laptops. Based on NVIDIA’s newest and smallest Ampere GPU, GA107, the RTX 3050 series finally rounds out the rest of NVIDIA’s laptop offering, introducing a mobile video card that’s better suited for mid-power systems, and cheaper than RTX 3060 to boot. Laptops featuring the new RTX 3050 video adapters will be available today, with all of the major vendors set to ship laptops using NVIDIA’s latest laptop adapter in short order.

NVIDIA’s xx50 tier of laptop video cards has traditionally been the company’s high-volume/low-price products for laptops, and the RTX 3050 family is no different. Laptops with the new adapters will start at $799, and will frequently crop up as a baseline option in Tiger Lake-H laptops. With Intel only shipping 32 EUs in Tiger Lake’s integrated GPU – just a third of how many are in Tiger Lake-U – Intel isn’t setting the bar for graphics performance particularly high in this generation of H-series CPUs. As a result, there’s a wide-open market for NVIDIA’s latest low-end graphics adapter to give these machines a boost in graphics performance.

And, like the RTX 3060 For Laptops launch back at the start of the year, it’s actually the laptop market that is getting the newest silicon first. For the RTX 3050 series, NVIDIA is rolling out their new GA107 GPU. Cut from the same cloth as the rest of the Ampere family, NVIDIA’s 5th Ampere chip is the smallest and cheapest yet, fulfilling the company’s traditional waterfall launch strategy of rolling out successively cheaper and lower-power/lower-performing chips for additional markets. As an added kicker, these are the first xx50 tier products to have ray tracing – and thus qualify for the RTX moniker – so expect to see NVIDIA promoting that aspect rather hard.

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 30 Series Laptop Specifications
  RTX 3070
Laptop GPU
RTX 3060
Laptop GPU
RTX 3050 Ti
Laptop GPU
RTX 3050
Laptop GPU
CUDA Cores 5120 3840 2560 2048
ROPs 80 48 32? 32?
Boost Clock 1290 - 1620MHz 1283 - 1703MHz 1035 - 1695MHz 1057 - 1740MHz
Memory Clock 14Gbps GDDR6 14Gbps GDDR6 12Gbps? GDDR6 12Gbps? GDDR6
Memory Bus Width 256-bit 192-bit 128-bit 128-bit
VRAM 8GB 6GB 4GB 4GB
TDP Range 80 - 125W 60 - 115W 35 - 80W 35 - 80W
GPU GA104 GA106 GA107 GA107
Architecture Ampere Ampere Ampere Ampere
Manufacturing Process Samsung 8nm Samsung 8nm Samsung 8nm Samsung 8nm
Launch Date 01/26/2021 01/26/2021 05/11/2021 05/11/2021

NVIDIA normally launches two parts at the xx50 tier for laptops, and for this generation NVIDIA has stuck squarely with tradition. At the top is the RTX 3050 Ti, a full-fat (or close to it) GA107 implementation with 20 SMs, for a total of 2560 CUDA cores. Below it is the RTX 3050 (vanilla), with has 16 SMs for 2048 CUDA cores. As these are Ampere family parts, NVIDIA has kept the basic GPU functional blocks proportional across the lineup, so we’re looking at 80/64 tensor cores and 20/16 ray tracing cores for the RTX 3050 Ti and RTX 3050 respectively.

Past that, NVIDIA isn’t sharing too much about GA107 in particular. We’re still waiting to find out the die size and transistor count (just how much smaller is it than the 276mm2 GA106?), as well as a few details like ROP counts.

As for clockspeeds, both RTX 3050 laptop parts are a bit more modestly clocked, owing to their lower TDP options. Officially, the boost clock for the RTX 3050 Ti for laptops is anywhere between 1035MHz and 1695MHz, depending on what the OEM dials in. Meanwhile the vanilla RTX 3050 for laptops lands between 1057MHz and 1740MHz; a bit higher than the Ti version, owing to the fewer enabled SMs in the lower-end part.

Meanwhile, both adapters will ship with 4GB of GDDR6 memory. We’re still awaiting confirmation from NVIDIA on the clockspeed, but 12Gbps is a reasonable bet for both power and cost reasons. Both cards come with a 128-bit memory bus – another typical design choice for xx50 tier parts – so this puts the cards’ memory bandwidth at or above 192GB/sec.

Finally, both parts offer the same 35 Watt to 80 Watt TDP window. This very wide range allows for the RTX 3050 parts to be suitable for use in everything from 13-inch gaming laptops to 17-inch workstation laptops. Though it also underscores the fact that the cards’ performance will vary pretty widely from OEM to OEM, since power and cooling allowances are such a critical element of performance. Overall, the new RTX 3050 parts come in at a lower TDP than the RTX 3060 – which started at 60 Watts – which opens the door for use in a bunch more designs, though I fully expect RTX 3060 to be more efficient where the parts overlap in power consumption.

Performance Expectations & 140 Wins

For better or worse, NVIDIA doesn’t spend a lot of time talking about the actual performance of their low-end laptop adapters, and the RTX 3050 series is no exception. The company’s promotional focus is more on features and how it compares to Intel’s integrated graphics, so we don’t have a lot of performance guidance to work with. Not helping matters again is the wide TDP range, which means different laptop designs can end up being quite far apart in performance.

For the games where NVIDIA does provide GTX 1650 Ti data as a comparison point, they have the RTX 3050 Ti at roughly 60% faster. But with a sample size of two games, this should be taken as a very rough estimate.

If nothing else, expect to see NVIDIA push DLSS harder here than they have on any other RTX 30 series part thus far. As these are the lowest performing Ampere parts (to date), they have little performance to spare for ray tracing and other resource-intensive effects at native (1080p) resolution, so NVIDIA will be relying on DLSS to make these advanced features viable on this entry-level hardware.

Otherwise, as Ampere family parts, the new RTX 3050 for laptop accelerators offer the usual suite of NVIDIA features, including those laptop features rolled out back at the RTX 3060 For Laptops launch earlier this year. So this includes HDMI 2.1 output support and Dynamic Boost 2.0. As well, even these entry-level parts support PCI Express 4.0 connectivity and resizable PCIe base address register (reBAR) support to maximize performance there.

Overall, NVIDIA is touting 140 wins across the consumer and professional (Studio) markets, underscoring the fact that the RTX 3050 series will be NVIDIA’s highest volume parts for the laptop market. Over the years NVIDIA has established a rather cozy symbiotic relationship with Intel’s H-series laptop CPUs – with xx50 tier parts being the de facto choice for laptops that include a discrete GPU as a baseline option – and it looks like that will once again be the case for Tiger Lake -H. Already NVIDIA has wins in 15-inch and 17-inch laptops from Dell, Lenovo, HP, and ASUS, and there will be more to come as OEMs continue to launch their next-generation H-series laptops.

Finally, according to NVIDIA, the first RTX 3050-equipped laptops will be released as soon as today, depending on the shipping schedule of each OEM. Laptops with the new adapters will start at $799.

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  • patel21 - Tuesday, May 11, 2021 - link

    Wow, so now Nvidia launches their low end products along with intels new cpus. How times have changed.
  • Smell This - Tuesday, May 11, 2021 - link


    I think folks are striving to *segment* individualized markets __ which is good and bad. The good news is that more product should be available; the bad news is the buyer must be 'aware'

    With the Ampere mobiles I am look forward to deep dive into AMD/Intel/nVidia with the Radeon RX 6X00M in mobile graphics (pending releases this quarter)
    ___Make it so, AT!
  • chrysrobyn - Tuesday, May 11, 2021 - link

    With the GPU shortages, I'd really look hard at this to go in a desktop system. If it were available.
  • Samus - Thursday, May 13, 2021 - link

    The industry seems fixated on mobile chips for all segments at the moment, because the smaller dies result in more chips per wafer. The best example of this is all-in-ones and most sub-$500 PC's all have laptop chips in them, especially the Ryzen U series (which is basically desktop class performance in 15w package) and those low-end GPU's with smaller die sizes seemingly the only retail-available video cards.

    This is fine and all but it just goes to show everyone seems dependent on TSMC and without competition prices skyrocket.
  • brookheather - Tuesday, May 11, 2021 - link

    I bought a new Dell G15 5510 with an RTX 3050ti last week direct from Dell so they are already available. Just waiting for it to arrive from the factory in China.
  • gijames1225 - Tuesday, May 11, 2021 - link

    Be curious to see how these bench against he GTX 1650 / Super without DLSS when they come out.
  • Spunjji - Tuesday, May 11, 2021 - link

    Notebookcheck have a performance preview based on a mid-TDP model already, and depending on resolution you're looking at performance between the RTX 2060 and the GTX 1660Ti - so it's not exactly a dramatic improvement, but it's not to be sniffed at, either.

    The RT performance in Port Royal compared with the RTX 2060 is *hilarious*, though. Truly humiliating stuff. They managed to make something that's even worse than the 2060, which was already fairly useless.
  • Yojimbo - Tuesday, May 11, 2021 - link

    Obviously there's either a driver problem, a testing problem, or a memory capacity limitation. Why would he test Port Royal at 1440p for this GPU, anyway? The laptop prototype he tested on only had a 1080p screen. If you want to drive a 1440p screen you probably want a different GPU, especially if you want to do ray tracing on 1440p, and certainly if you want to do ray tracing on 1440p without DLSS. The test is pretty silly, so it's not surprising that the results are hilarious.

    The 2060 is a great GPU. It's certainly not useless. I assume you're confusing what you are looking to buy with the market.
  • Spunjji - Thursday, May 13, 2021 - link

    "Obviously there's either a driver problem, a testing problem, or a memory capacity limitation."
    I wouldn't say the first two are obvious. Problems with memory capacity seem very likely, but I feel like that's a relevant concern to raise about future games with RT effects.

    "Why would he test Port Royal at 1440p for this GPU"
    Port Royal is a 1440p test, so taking results at 1080p wouldn't be comparable to every other result in their database. I'm not sure how much lowering the resolution would help vs. the 2060 - Ampere's performance advantage over Turing increases with resolution. It's a bit of a problem for low-end parts like this one (you can see it in the other results).

    "The 2060 is a great GPU. It's certainly not useless."
    I wasn't clear - the 2060's performance is fine (I have the broadly equivalent RX 5600M), it's the *RTX capabilities* that I was describing as "fairly useless". You have to sacrifice image quality to free up resources for effects that are supposed to improve image quality, and to me that doesn't make any sense. I think they should have limited RTX to the 2070 and above with Turing, and 3060 and above with Ampere.

    As it is, Nvidia is pushing low-end users to pay for RTX features they can't really use to provide the illusion of a larger installed user base for RTX. DLSS is a helpful feature for low-end cards even without RT, though, so it's not all bad.
  • Yojimbo - Thursday, May 13, 2021 - link

    "I wouldn't say the first two are obvious. Problems with memory capacity seem very likely, but I feel like that's a relevant concern to raise about future games with RT effects."

    A, B, or C, is true if any of A, B, or C are true. It's not a relevant concern to raise, because in the future one is less likely to use the card for 1440p, not more likely. And we don't know the answer to the question (why is the benchmark so low) so we can't talk as if we did. First it needs to be explored and A, and B need to be ruled out. "I wouldn't say..." is not ruling it out. There's no reason to believe it's not A or B. None at all.

    "Port Royal is a 1440p test"
    Then it's a useless benchmark for this card.

    "I wasn't clear - the 2060's performance is fine (I have the broadly equivalent RX 5600M), it's the *RTX capabilities* that I was describing as "fairly useless". You have to sacrifice image quality to free up resources for effects that are supposed to improve image quality, and to me that doesn't make any sense."

    That isn't true. You can play with RT and DLSS, especially if you are able to use G-Sync or Freesync, even at 1440p with the 2060. At 1080p the 2060 can lock to 60fps in Control with ultra settings, all ray tracing enabled, using DLSS.

    As it is, Nvidia is pushing low-end users to pay for RTX features they can't really use to provide the illusion of a larger installed user base for RTX.

    "As it is, Nvidia is pushing low-end users to pay for RTX features they can't really use to provide the illusion of a larger installed user base for RTX."

    The evidence clearly says otherwise. It's all catalogued on digital foundry.

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