- NVIDIA’s RTX 5050 GPU was identified in laptops for play with RTX 5060
- HP Victus 15 laptops will offer these Blackwell GPUs
- The RTX 5050 is likely to be a graphics card reserved for the laptop, as with the previous love generation
Far from the RTX 5090 and RTX 5080, and the continuous stock misfortunes around these GPUs, we had another observation of the RTX 5050 (and 5060) at the other end of the Blackwell range.
In this case, however, these are mobile graphics cards for laptops, not desktop models.
Videocardz managed to obtain a specification sheet for Victus 15 (Model FA2) portable computers of HP which reveal that these devices will present GeForce RTX 5060 and RTX 5050 from NVIDIA.
This seems to confirm the existence of these graphics cards, but as always, we must be careful around the disclosed material which can prove to use obsolete information (or even be rigged).
The new Victus 15 specification also includes 13th generation Intel processors, completing Blackwell laptop GPUs with enough processing power for good performance. However, this contrasts with laptops fed by RTX 5090 and RTX 5080, which will use some of the new ultra recent nucleus of Intel.
Note that the GPUs RTX 5060 and RTX 5050 have not been officially confirmed by Nvidia (for office PCs, or laptops), and they lacked Blackwell ads made at these 2025.
It seems likely that they arrive at one point, of course, but the RTX 5050 will probably be a GPU reserved for a laptop, on the basis of the rumors that we have heard so far. (They are all about the mobile part, and there is nothing to suggest an office graphics card – although this does not exclude the possibility).
The RTX 5050 GPU has a Trump Cototre in DLSS 4
Considering the RTX 5050 (which I reiterate No Position officially confirmed by NVIDIA) as the lowest level option for a Blackwell laptop GPU, it will face rigid competition. In particular from Stix Halo Apus AMD, which pack a serious growl with their integrated graphics for laptops (or pocket computers).
However, Nvidia has a secret weapon here – namely DLSS 4, which will certainly be useful to give the RTX 5050 a little more. I have already pointed out how much the change in scaling technology is improved by step as a giant thanks to its new transformer model and the multi-trame generation (MFG), which improve stability and image quality, and increase the image frequencies respectively. (With PC games that support technology, of course).
This does not mean that the RTX 5050 will not work well enough in a resolution like 1080p, but the reports suggest that it will only use 8 GB of VRAM, which now seems fragile for AAA games today (and certainly in the future). The old weft generation technology introduced with RTX 4000 GPUs had ghost problems coupled with input latency headache – these disadvantages were both improved with MFG.
For those who have a budget, laptops HP Victus 15 RTX 5060 and RTX 5050 can end up being a reasonable option.