For the first time in 30 years, NVIDIA will not release any new gaming GPUs in 2026. RTX 50 Super is canceled, RTX 60 delayed to 2028, and millions of gamers are asking: what happened?
In a shocking turn that has sent ripples through the PC gaming world, NVIDIA will not release a single new graphics card in 2026 — the first time in 30 years. RTX 50 Super is canceled, RTX 6090 and the
60-series are delayed to 2028, and millions of gamers worldwide are asking: what happened? The answer is simple but bitter: the AI revolution moved so fast that it left gaming behind as acceptable "collateral
damage." When an AI chip can generate ten times the profit of a gaming GPU, the choice for corporations is easy — even if it means abandoning millions of loyal customers. This article dissects the deepest
GPU crisis in history. From the global memory chip shortage that paralyzed the supply chain, to NVIDIA's ruthless strategy that sacrificed gaming, to the golden opportunities created for AMD and Intel.
If you're planning to buy a GPU, if you care about the future of PC gaming, or if you want to know why your graphics card suddenly became more valuable — don't miss this article. Breaking a 30-Year Tradition:
The Year Without GPUs Since NVIDIA's founding in 1993, the company has released at least one new GPU generation for the gaming market every year. From the Riva 128 in the 90s to the GeForce RTX 50 series
in 2025, this annual cycle became an unwritten law of the industry. Gamers knew they could expect more power, better efficiency, and new technologies every year. But in February 2026, a bombshell report
from The Information shattered this tradition. According to the report, confirmed by two independent sources, NVIDIA has decided not to release any new gaming GPUs in 2026. Not the RTX 50 Super that was
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