Five Brand New NVIDIA Blackwell GPU PCI IDs Spotted: GB112 & GB120 Could Point To More Ultra Variants

Hassan Mujtaba
NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs Estimated To Cost Up To $35,000, AI Servers Up To $3 Million As The Firm Gears Up For The Next "Gold Rush" 1

NVIDIA seems to be preparing more GPUs under its Blackwell family as five new PCI IDs have been spotted online.

NVIDIA Blackwell To See More Updates This Year As Five New GPU PCI IDs Added Online

NVIDIA's Blackwell lineup is really extensive since it covers two Data Center families and one consumer family. These lineups are segmented into Blackwell Ultra for DataCenters (GB300), 1st Gen Blackwell for DataCenters (GB100/GB200), Blackwell for Consumer (GB200), & Blackwell for Spark systems (GB10/N1X). The lineup seems to be getting an update.

Related Story Hands On With NVIDIA’s First RTX Spark Laptops & PCs Ft. ASUS, Dell, HP, Microsoft, MSI, Lenovo

As per the new PCI ID repository list, it looks like NVIDIA has silently added five new GPU PCI IDs, which include one GB110, three GB112, and one GB120 GPU IDs. The GB110 GPU ID responds to the Blackwell Ultra lineup, while the GB112 and GB120 GPUs look to be entirely new.

Although details are sparse, these two new GPUs could be further iterations of the Blackwell Ultra lineup rather than a consumer-aimed product. The consumer lineup is part of the GB200 family with GPUs such as the GB202, GB203, GB205, GB206, and GB207. NVIDIA has launched a product on each of these GPUs within its GeForce RTX 50 lineup.

The GB112 and GB120 GPUs could either be further tuned Blackwell Ultra chips for the NVIDIA DGX, HGX, or MGX family or something entirely new. The company is expected to unveil its Rubin lineup at CES & GTC showcases, but those won't enter mass production until the second half of this year. Blackwell Ultra and the older Blackwell GPUs for Data Centers are now ramping, so NVIDIA may have found further ways to tune its current Blackwell lineup.

Some might think these are related to the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 SUPER lineup, but that may not be the case, as those products will utilize the existing consumer GB200 GPU lineup while updating the memory and core configurations. The "SUPER" family is expected sometime around the mid of 2026, though the recent memory shortages may cause delays.

News Source: Harukaze5719

Hassan Mujtaba Photo

About the author: A Software Engineer by training and a PC enthusiast by passion, Hassan Mujtaba serves as Wccftech's Senior Editor for hardware section. With years of experience in the industry, he specializes in deep-dive technical analysis of next-generation CPU and GPU architectures, motherboards, and cooling solutions. His work involves not only breaking news on upcoming technologies but also extensive hands-on reviews and benchmarking.

Follow Wccftech on Google to get more of our news coverage in your feeds.

Button