Bolt Graphics has made a surprise debut in the GPU market with its Zeus GPU, which will employ laptop memory and give current-gen options no chance of standing in competition.
If It Becomes Reality, Zeus GPU Will Be The First Current-Gen GPU To Offer Expandable Memory
Well, when it comes to competing with mainstream GPUs, a lot of startups have come up with bold claims, bringing in new innovations and different features, but we haven’t really seen an actual market-feasible solution coming from them. However, with Bolt Graphics, things might take a new turn in the GPU segment, as the startup pledges to bring their Zeus GPU into the industry by 2027, and the performance and specifications revealed to us by the firm are both shocking and amazing at the same time.
Funny enough, we did talk about the reason why GPUs don’t have expandable VRAMs last week, and coincidentally, Bolt Graphics listened to us by showcasing a solution that allows consumers to ramp up memory capacity. According to the firm, the Zeus GPU can be equipped with a whopping 384 GB of memory, but the actual twist here is that the firm is said to employ DDR5 SO-DIMM slots, rather than the traditional GDDR options. The GPU will be equipped with 2x or 4x slots, depending upon the configuration chosen by consumers.

Something doesn’t add up to Bolt Graphics’ announcement. Based on the on-paper specifications, you are looking at massive TDP ratings, but the manufacturer claims that the GPU will be powered by a single 8-pin PCIe power connector, which could bring in around 120W to the mainboard. So, there’s confusion on how the company plans to run such components on board with limited power, which leads us to believe that either the announcement is a PR stunt, or that the company has made a breakthrough that even NVIDIA and AMD managed to leave out.

Speaking of performance claims, in ‘pre-silicon benchmarks’, which are basically hypothetical numbers, the Zeus GPU is claimed to outperform the GeForce RTX 5090 in rendering workloads by tenfold, and that too under full-quality 4K path-traced graphics. While the performance numbers are optimistic, such a massive leap does seem a bit skeptical, but another thing that is pretty weird is having an RJ45 port on a GPU, so if you ask my opinion, I don’t see the Zeus GPU as a full-scale consumer solution for now.