The memory setup is less surprising than the shader count. Reports consistently describe 8GB of GDDR6 on a 128-bit bus at 18 Gbps, which works out to roughly 288 GB/s of bandwidth . That is a conventional budget-to-mainstream configuration, and it is one reason the card should not be read as an RX 9060 XT equivalent despite the similar core count.
The RX 9050’s rumored position is unusual: it may have the same 2,048 stream processors as the RX 9060 XT, but lower clocks and less aggressive memory than the XT model . AMD’s officially announced RX 9060 XT has been reported with a starting price of $299 and a boost frequency of up to 3.13 GHz, giving useful context for where a lower-end RX 9050 would need to sit
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The stranger comparison is with the non-XT RX 9060. PCGuide reports that the RX 9060 is an OEM-only model with 1,792 cores, while the leaked RX 9050 spec lists 2,048 stream processors . Chinese coverage of the same leak also describes the RX 9050 as having more cores than the standard RX 9060, but with lower clocks to separate it from the RX 9060 series
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In other words, the RX 9050 could look “bigger” on paper in one dimension while still being slower in practice. The reported 1,920 MHz game clock and 2,600 MHz boost clock are well below the RX 9060 XT figures cited in the leak coverage, and the 18 Gbps memory is also below reports of the RX 9060 XT using faster 20 Gbps GDDR6 for 320 GB/s of bandwidth .
The safest explanation is product segmentation. The leaks suggest AMD may be separating these models by frequency, memory configuration, sales channel, and price band—not by shader count alone .
A full Navi 44 chip running at reduced clocks could let AMD offer a cheaper RDNA 4 desktop card without letting it overlap too much with the RX 9060 XT . That would also explain why the RX 9050 can be described as having a “full” core configuration while still being positioned as the slowest or most affordable RX 9000-series desktop option in the reports
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There is also a plausible binning angle: chips that are physically complete but not ideal for higher-clocked products could be sold in a lower-clocked SKU. However, the provided reporting does not confirm AMD’s internal binning strategy, so that should be treated as inference rather than fact.
Power is not firmly pinned down. GamesRadar’s summary of the leak lists board power as unknown . One Chinese report claims a 450W recommended power supply and estimates power around 130W, but that figure should be treated cautiously because it is not confirmed by AMD
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Pricing is even less certain. The RX 9050 is described as sitting below the RX 9060 series and targeting the entry-level desktop segment . Since the RX 9060 XT launched at a reported starting price of $299, a retail RX 9050 would likely need to land below that to make sense—but no reliable MSRP appears in the current leak set
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The likely strategy is clear even if the exact numbers are not: deliver a lower-cost RDNA 4 card for 1080p gaming, preserve the marketing appeal of a full 2,048-core Navi 44 configuration, and use clocks plus memory bandwidth to keep it from cannibalizing faster RX 9060-series products .
Several reports frame the RX 9050 as AMD’s possible answer to Nvidia’s expected GeForce RTX 5050 in the entry-level GPU market . If the 2,048-core leak is accurate, AMD would have an easy spec-sheet talking point for budget buyers, especially if pricing is aggressive.
But performance will not be decided by shader count alone. The RX 9050’s real competitiveness will depend on final clocks, board power, retail price, driver performance, memory behavior in modern games, and the final RTX 5050 specifications. Until both cards are official and benchmarked, the RTX 5050 comparison is best understood as market positioning rather than a performance verdict.
Current leak coverage does not substantiate a specific Computex 2026 reveal for the RX 9050. The available May 2026 reports describe an alleged card and leaked specifications, but they do not establish an AMD launch date or event plan .
The bottom line: the Radeon RX 9050 leak points to a potentially unusual budget RDNA 4 GPU—full Navi 44 cores, 8GB GDDR6, and lower clocks—but the card remains unannounced. Treat the specifications as plausible rumor until AMD confirms pricing, power, availability, and performance.
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