It looks like NVIDIA has allegedly released details to their AIB partners for their next-generation GeForce 11 series graphics cards. The new cards have long been rumored for arrival in Q3/Q4 of 2018 and it looks like we finally have some proper information of when the new graphics cards would be released for gamers.
NVIDIA GeForce 11 Series AllegedlyArriving Next Month - Green Team To Kick off The Party With The GTX 1180 Flagship, GTX 1170 and GTX 1160 To Follow Up
The details come from the YouTuber, Gamer Meld, who allegedly received an email from an NVIDIA board partner. The email mentions at least four GeForce 11 series graphics cards along with their release dates. The GeForce 11 series graphics cards mentioned in the email include the following:
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1180 (30th August Release Date)NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1180+ (30th September Release Date)NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1170 (30th September Release Date)NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1160 (30th October Release Date)
All four models are desktop SKUs and will be available in reference and custom flavors. We can expect to see custom variants fully available a couple of weeks after the reference launch. As for the release dates, we cannot confirm their authenticity but since NVIDIA has the majority of their launches panned out for either Tuesdays or Thursdays, we can say that these dates aren't just a made-up thing, for now.
As for the other details mentioned in the email, there's a press conference on 21st August, just a few days prior to the GTX 1180 launch. This may be more of a board partners meeting rather than a full blown out presentation of the new cards. NVIDIA will hold a separate event for gamers in which they would announce the new GeForce 11 series cards. Two potential show dates could be Gamescom or PAX West which fall around the same timeframe as the GTX 1180's launch.
The email also mentions the reason as to why these graphics cards were held back from launch for so long. Apparently, the rumors concerning the overstock of NVIDIA GPUs on retailers and partners end was a real thing and still is. Various board partners are still in the phase of transitioning from manufacturing on the GeForce 10 series cards to GeForce 11 series.

They still have a large supply of unfinished GPUs and boards so expect prices on the previous generation to fall a bit in the coming month as the launch of GeForce 11 series cards get even closer. At the same time, NVIDIA will have an army of next-gen GPUs to ship out to their partners so they can be turned into GeForce boards for the gaming market.

What I find more interested about this leak is that it mentions a GTX 1180+, just a month after the GTX 1180. We cannot confirm if this is an NVIDIA specific model or a custom board by the partner in the email. I would incline towards the latter because NVIDIA just doesn't update their flagship a month after its launch. As for the release dates, well, we have heard the same thing from Lenovo about the GTX 1180 and GTX 1160 so maybe they are real.
As well as along with up to GTX 1060 at this time but time to market with NVIDIA 11 series up to 1180 down the road.
And up to 1060 at this time, of course, with the NVIDIA 11 series time to market later this fall would get those GPUs as well. via Lenovo Rep at E3 2018

Furthermore, we have also seen new details starting to emerge regarding the next-generation NVIDIA GeForce graphics cards as anew PCB prototypewas just discovered a few weeks ago, featuringMicron’s high-performance GDDR6 memoryand a beefy power management system which is required for internal testing for unreleased graphics cards and graphics boards. We cannot say for sure though and will have to wait till the mentioned launch date to find out whether this leak was credible or not.
GPU Memory Technology Updates
| Graphics Card Name | Memory Technology | Memory Speed | Memory Bus | Memory Bandwidth | Release |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AMD Radeon R9 Fury X | HBM1 | 1.0 Gbps | 4096-bit | 512 GB/s | 2015 |
| NVIDIA GTX 1080 | GDDR5X | 10.0 Gbps | 256-bit | 320 GB/s | 2016 |
| NVIDIA Tesla P100 | HBM2 | 1.4 Gbps | 4096-bit | 720 GB/s | 2016 |
| NVIDIA Titan Xp | GDDR5X | 11.4 Gbps | 384-bit | 547 GB/s | 2017 |
| AMD RX Vega 64 | HBM2 | 1.9 Gbps | 2048-bit | 483 GB/s | 2017 |
| NVIDIA Titan V | HBM2 | 1.7 Gbps | 3072-bit | 652 GB/s | 2017 |
| NVIDIA Tesla V100 | HBM2 | 1.7 Gbps | 4096-bit | 901 GB/s | 2017 |
| NVIDIA RTX 2080 Ti | GDDR6 | 14.0 Gbps | 384-bit | 672 GB/s | 2018 |
| AMD Instinct MI100 | HBM2 | 2.4 Gbps | 4096-bit | 1229 GB/s | 2020 |
| NVIDIA A100 80 GB | HBM2e | 3.2 Gbps | 5120-bit | 2039 GB/s | 2020 |
| NVIDIA RTX 3090 | GDDR6X | 19.5 Gbps | 384-bit | 936.2 GB/s | 2020 |
| AMD Instinct MI200 | HBM2e | 3.2 Gbps | 8192-bit | 3200 GB/s | 2021 |
| NVIDIA RTX 3090 Ti | GDDR6X | 21.0 Gbps | 384-bit | 1008 GB/s | 2022 |
| NVIDIA H100 80 GB | HBM3/E | 2.6 Gbps | 5120-bit | 1681 GB/s | 2022 |









