The GPU rumor mill is heating up again, and this time AMD is at the center of it. A new leak suggests the company’s upcoming Radeon RX 10950 XTX could deliver a massive performance leap, potentially putting serious pressure on NVIDIA’s flagship line.
According to the leak, the RX 10950 XTX is built with 96 compute units (CUs), each housing 128 cores. That brings the total to a jaw-dropping 12,288 cores, nearly triple the 4,096 cores found in the RX 9070 XT. If accurate, this would represent one of the most dramatic generational jumps in AMD’s GPU history.
What the Numbers Mean
The RX 9070 XT from the RDNA 4 lineup currently tops out at 64 CUs with 64 cores each. Scaling that up to 96 CUs at double the density means AMD may finally be ready to reclaim its place at the very top of the graphics market. While actual frame-rate numbers remain unknown, the sheer scale of these specs has sparked speculation that AMD could challenge NVIDIA’s RTX 5090 directly.
RDNA 5 on the Horizon
This leak also ties into broader rumors surrounding AMD’s next-generation RDNA 5 architecture. Earlier whispers pointed to cards with up to 154 CUs, 36 GB of GDDR7 memory on a 384-bit bus, and chips built on TSMC’s cutting-edge 3 nm process. If the RX 10950 XTX is indeed part of this family, it would mark AMD’s first major return to the ultra-high-end market after focusing heavily on mid-range GPUs with RDNA 4.
A Comeback in the Making?
For years, NVIDIA has dominated the premium GPU space with its RTX 40- and 50-series cards, leaving AMD competitive mostly in value and mid-range performance. A card like the RX 10950 XTX could flip that script—provided AMD can back up these raw specs with strong ray tracing, AI features, and competitive pricing.
Why the Skepticism
As exciting as the leak is, it’s worth remembering that nothing is official. AMD has not confirmed specs, release windows, or even the existence of an “RX 10950 XTX.” Branding could change, numbers could shift, and what we’re seeing now may be an internal prototype or placeholder data.
Still, the timing makes sense. With the GPU market hungry for next-gen hardware and NVIDIA preparing its own RTX 6000-series monsters, AMD has every incentive to aim high. If the leaks prove accurate, PC gamers could be staring down one of the most powerful Radeon cards ever made.




