PlayStation 6 Rumors Suggest Massive Upgrade With 30 GB GDDR7 RAM Boost

Ali Ahmed Akib
By Ali Ahmed Akib
4 Min Read
Image Credit: Sony

The PlayStation 6, Sony’s next big console, is already one of the most highly anticipated gaming machines of the decade. Early leaks and talk in the industry point to a big jump in memory technology, with a possible 30 GB of GDDR7 RAM. This would push graphics quality and performance much beyond what the current PlayStation 5 can do. Both gamers and developers are keeping a careful eye on the news as it comes out, with a launch window estimated between 2027 and 2028.

The 30 GB GDDR7 RAM Memory Upgrade

Notorious console insider Kepler L2 has stated that the PlayStation 6 would have 30 GB of GDDR7 memory, which is one of the most talked-about rumors right now. The unified memory arrangement in the PlayStation 5 uses 16 GB of GDDR6 and runs at around 448 GB/s. And this next-gen memory is expected to run on a 160-bit memory bus with a blistering bandwidth of approximately 640 GB/s.

A significant increase in both speed and capacity might allow the PS6 to manage more intricate game elements, achieve smoother frame rates, and immerse players in richer worlds. Loading massive textures, real-time lighting, and other memory-intensive processes might be significantly improved with larger and faster memory, as memory bandwidth is a crucial component in providing data to both the GPU and CPU.

Visuals and Efficiency

The PS6’s graphics capabilities will reportedly be much enhanced by AMD’s future designs, which is in line with the memory reports. Speculation suggests that the system will have a bespoke CPU constructed on a 3 nm Zen 6 process and an RDNA 5-based GPU with performance estimates ranging from 34 to 40 teraflops. Ray tracing, artificial intelligence upscaling, and next-gen rendering techniques could be significantly improved with such hardware.

Of particular note is the possibility that Sony’s upcoming system may have superior ray tracing performance. A more powerful GPU and more memory bandwidth would allow modern game engines to use ray tracing for realistic lighting and reflections, allowing for higher frame rates to be maintained.

Concept and Variants

Speculation about a PS6 lineup with more variants is also circulating. A possible portable version with approximately 24 GB of LPDDR5X memory has been leaked, with the goal of providing next-gen performance for portable gaming.

Even with 30 GB of RAM, some fans still don’t think a system launching in the second half of this decade will have enough horsepower. Despite the great memory speed and bandwidth numbers, some players consider this figure underwhelming because of the possibility of higher memory capacity offered by PC technology and competitor consoles. Others argue that Sony was able to avoid charging exorbitant prices at launch thanks to this configuration’s compromise between performance and production cost.

PS6 Development: Still In The Future

The PS5 is likely to receive support from Sony until at least 2030, providing developers with plenty of time to optimize games before moving on to the next generation. At that point in time, the PS6 has the potential to overtake Xbox as the preferred platform for games with visually demanding and expansive open environments.

Until Sony makes a formal announcement, these details are considered unofficial, as is the case with all early hardware leaks. But with so many reports indicating considerable improvements and the speculations continuing to grow unchecked, it’s certain the PS6 will be a huge step forward for PlayStation hardware.

ali ahmed akib
By Ali Ahmed Akib Editor-in-chief
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Ali Ahmed Akib is the Co-Founder and Editor-in-chief of GameRiv. Akib grew up playing MOBA titles, especially League of Legends and is currently managing the editorial team of GameRiv.