The countdown to the RTX 50-series is on, but some GPU brands are already looking further down the road. A trademark filing with the Eurasian Economic Commission (EEC) has revealed that a GPU brand called Ninja has registered not just the RTX 5090, but also an RTX 5090 Ti, and even an RTX 6090 Ti! This bold move suggests that GPU manufacturers are already planning for the future, even if we’re still waiting for the RTX 50-series to arrive.
While the RTX 60-series is likely years away, the filing encompasses the entire RTX 50-series lineup, from the RTX 5050 (including Ti and Super versions) to the RTX 5090 Ti (or RTX 5090 Super). Every possible card variation, from basic to Ti and Super, is being trademarked. Interestingly, there are no Ti Super cards, which might signal the end of that specific naming scheme after the RTX 4070 Ti Super.
The filing doesn’t stop at the RTX 50-series. Ninja has also trademarked the entire RTX 60-series lineup, starting with the RTX 6050 and going up to the RTX 6090. Again, all the GPUs come in Super and Ti variants. This hints at an ambitious roadmap for future generations of GPUs, likely based on Rubin architecture.
While it’s unlikely we’ll see any of these GPUs before 2027, or perhaps late 2026, the sheer breadth of the filing is a testament to the long-term vision these companies have.
This filing serves as another indicator that the RTX 50-series launch is imminent. We already know Nvidia’s CEO, Jensen Huang, will be giving a keynote during CES 2025 in January, and hardware leaker kopite7kimi has also confirmed the impending arrival of the Blackwell architecture, the core of the RTX 50-series. The RTX 5090 and RTX 5080 are expected to be the first to launch, but the RTX 5070 could also be part of the initial wave.
If the RTX 5090 Ti does become a reality, we probably won’t see it for another few months to a year, as it likely represents a later stage in the RTX 50-series rollout.
While this trademark filing doesn’t guarantee that Ninja will actually launch all these GPUs, it offers a fascinating glimpse into the future of graphics cards. It’s a bold statement about the ambitions of GPU manufacturers and a clear indication that the race for graphics supremacy is far from over.