Nvidia appears to be bumping the RTX 3080 and RTX 3070 Ti's memory specs

Gigabyte Aorus Xtreme RTX 3080 Ti
(Image credit: Gigabyte)

New graphics cards appear to be finally on their way if a new post on the EEC filings is anything to go by. A total of 19 cards from Gigabyte are listed on the site, which covers new memory SKUs of the RTX 3080 and the RTX 3070 Ti as well as the as-yet-unreleased AMD Radeon RX 6500 XT Radeon. 

The post was highlighted by @momomo_us (via Videocardz) who has good form for unearthing interesting tidbits in the PC hardware market. The Eurasian Economic Commission listing is a necessary step in any product's life cycle, and while it's not a guarantee that every product on this list will see the light of day, it's a good sign that a good chunk of them will.

At first glance, it may look like gobbledegook, but Gigabyte follows a reasonable system for naming its products, and from that, we can unpick what each of the 19 cards actually is, as well as, importantly in this case, how much memory is involved. 

Swipe to scroll horizontally
Gigabyte brandRTX 3080 12GBRTX 3070 Ti 16GBRX 6500 XT 4GB
Aorus ExtremeGV-N3080AORUSX W-12GDRow 0 - Cell 2 Row 0 - Cell 3
Aorus ExtremeGV-N3080AORUSX WB-12GDRow 1 - Cell 2 Row 1 - Cell 3
Aorus MasterGV-N3080AORUS M-12GDGV-N307TAORUS M-16GDRow 2 - Cell 3
Gaming OCGV-N3080GAMING OC-12GDGV-N307TDGAMING OCV-16Row 3 - Cell 3
GamingGV-N3080GAMING-12GD GV-N307TGAMING-16GDGV-R65XTGAMING-4GD
Vision OCGV-N3080VISION OC-12GDRow 5 - Cell 2 Row 5 - Cell 3
VisionGV-N3080VISION-12GDGV-N307TVISION-16GDRow 6 - Cell 3
Eagle OCGV-N3080EAGLE OC-12GDGV-N307TEAGLE OC-16GDGV-R65XTEAGLE OC-4GD
EagleGV-N3080EAGLE-12GDGV-N307TEAGLE-16GDGV-R65XTEAGLE-4GD
Aorus Gaming Box (External)GV-N3080IXEB-12GDRow 9 - Cell 2 Row 9 - Cell 3

From this, we can see there's supposedly a 12GB version of the RTX 3080 on the way, as well as a 16GB version of the RTX 3070 Ti. Or at least Gigabyte seems to think so. Nothing else is expected to change with these new SKUs, other than the amount of RAM they support.

The original RTX 3080 boasted 10GB of GDDR6X, so an extra 2GB is unlikely to make much of a difference. Doubling the memory on the RTX 3070 Ti could have a bigger impact in some games though, or at least allow you to pick some settings that you couldn't with the original cards—Far Cry 6 for instance complains about a lack of VRAM if you're packing less then 11GB when trying to max out all the settings with the HD texture pack.

Tips and advice

The Nvidia RTX 3070 and AMD RX 6700 XT side by side on a colourful background

(Image credit: Future)

How to buy a graphics card: tips on buying a graphics card in the barren silicon landscape that is 2021

The inclusion of the AMD Radeon RX 6500 XT is interesting as well, simply because this is a card we've seen rumoured for a while now, but heard nothing official about it out of AMD. That these three cards appear on this list is a good indication that its arrival is imminent. That 4GB of VRAM is a bit concerning though—having recently looked at the MSI Pulse GL66, which has an Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050 Ti also packing just 4GB of VRAM, I found plenty of games will turn their noses up at such a small amount of memory.

That's a healthy amount of cards across Gigabyte's many brands, and if nothing else, it indicates that we're about to get an influx of new cards. It won't just be Gigabyte releasing these new SKUs if they do come to light, though, so you can expect new cards from the likes of Asus, MSI, EVGA, and all the usual suspects in that case.

There's no official date of when we'll see any of these cards, although, with CES happening at the start of January, we'd expect any new announcements there, with stock appearing before the end of that month. A lot of new graphics cards would certainly make for a good start to 2022, so fingers crossed that happens.

Alan Dexter

Alan has been writing about PC tech since before 3D graphics cards existed, and still vividly recalls having to fight with MS-DOS just to get games to load. He fondly remembers the killer combo of a Matrox Millenium and 3dfx Voodoo, and seeing Lara Croft in 3D for the first time. He's very glad hardware has advanced as much as it has though, and is particularly happy when putting the latest M.2 NVMe SSDs, AMD processors, and laptops through their paces. He has a long-lasting Magic: The Gathering obsession but limits this to MTG Arena these days.

Read more
Nvidia RTX 4070 Founders Edition graphics card
Zotac website leak seemingly confirms monstrous 32GB Nvidia RTX 5090 but we're still concerned about how stingy Nvidia might be further down its new GPU range
Nvidia RTX 5070 Ti graphics card
Your next chance to secure an RTX 50-series graphics card at launch could be a 16 GB variant of the RTX 5060 Ti next month
Nvidia RTX 4090 Founders Edition
Multiple Nvidia RTX 50-series placeholders have appeared on the EEC database, although I wouldn't get too excited about a hypothetical 'RTX 5090 Ti Super' if I were you
Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 render on green background
AIB vendors getting the RTX 5080's memory config wrong could mean 50-series Super cards have more and faster VRAM
The AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT and RX 9070 RDNA 4 GPUs arranged in diagonal lines, taken from a CES 2025 presentation slide
If the AMD RX 9070 XT is as beefy as these leaked specs and benchmark makes out, low Nvidia 50-series stocks might not matter
The AMD Radeon RX 9070 XT and RX 9070 RDNA 4 GPUs arranged in diagonal lines, taken from a CES 2025 presentation slide
AMD might have told us little about its RDNA 4 graphics cards but at least we know the Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 XT have 16 GB of VRAM
Latest in Memory
A photo of Corsair's Vengeance DDR5-8400 CUDIMM memory kit
Corsair Vengeance DDR5-8400 CUDIMM review
Corsair's personalized memroy on a gradient
Corsair's new 'personalised RAM' gives you the option to pick the look and speed of memory you hide in the case anyway
A promotional image showing multiple Corsair Vengeance CUDIMM memory sticks on a desk
Corsair rolls out its first CUDIMM memory sticks for Intel Arrow Lake gaming PCs and they're as pricey as you'd expect them to be
Corsair Vengeance RAM sticks
We've more or less hit RAM price equilibrium: this 32 GB 6000 MT/s DDR5 kit is closing in on the price of a comparable DDR4 kit
G.SKILL DDR5
G.SKILL and Kingston break the 12,000MT/s DDR5 memory barrier with Intel's new Arrow Lake CPU
A pair of Team Group DDR5-RAM kits against a teal background with a white border
Need some speedy DDR5 for a new build or gaming PC upgrade? This Team Group 32 GB kit is just $86
Latest in News
Commander Shepard in Mass Effect 3.
Mass Effect's Jennifer Hale, who played femshep, 'saw no line' before she recorded them for Bioware's flagship trilogy: 'It was all cold reading on the spot'
A side by side comparison of two Asus Q-Release systems, with the original design on the top and the bottom showing the apparently new design.
Asus appears to have quietly changed the design of its Q-Release PCIe slot after claims of potential GPU pin damage
Microsoft's Task Manager in Windows 11
After years of complaints about Windows Task Manager displaying CPU utilization incorrectly, a fix is finally on its way
Sony RGB LED panel tech
Sony's fixing the wrong panel problems while showing off its new 'RGB LED' backlight tech with outrageous colours and brightness
Super Mario World
Super Nintendo consoles appear to be running ever-so-slightly faster as they age and speedrunning detectives are hot on the case
A photo of an Intel Core Ultra 9 285K processor surrounded by DDR5 memory sticks from Corsair, Kingston, and Lexar
Fresh leak suggests Intel's on-again-off-again Arrow Lake CPU refresh is back on the menu (boys)