NVIDIA VR200 is a real monster. And it has already reached the first people
NVIDIA has had a record financial year and at the same time confirms the arrival of the next generation of AI infrastructure. The company revealed that the first test units of the Vera Rubin systems have already been delivered to customers, and full production and larger-scale deliveries will start in the second half of 2026. The new platform is expected to significantly increase efficiency and at the same time reduce the costs of operating artificial intelligence models.
This is as much as 576 GB of HBM4 memory and 1.5 TB LPDDR5X
In its published financial report, NVIDIA reported that it achieved revenue of $215.9 billion for the full fiscal year 2025. The fourth quarter alone brought in as much as $68.1 billion, which confirms the huge demand for the company’s solutions related to AI, data centers and high-precision computing acceleration.
Vera Rubin VR200 systems are currently the most advanced structures in the Green portfolio. Each Rubin accelerator offers up to 50 PFLOPS of FP4 compute power, which translates to approximately 100 PFLOPS for a Superchip configuration. Each chip uses two compute chiplets and eight HBM4 memory stacks. This translates into 288 GB of memory for a single GPU and 576 GB for the full Superchip module.
The new Vera processor is also a big step forward. The unit offers 88 proprietary Armv9.2 cores called Olympus and supports a total of 172 threads. The platform can support up to 1.5 TB of LPDDR5X memory in the SOCAMM format, which allows it to handle the most demanding AI and data analysis workloads.
Jensen Huang’s team emphasizes that this solution will allow training trillion-parameter models using just a quarter of the number of GPUs required by the current generation of Blackwell. At the same time, application costs are expected to drop even tenfold.
NVIDIA points out that interest in the new platform is already very high. The company expects all major cloud service providers to deploy Vera Rubin systems in their data centers. Therefore, there is no indication that anyone could threaten the position of the Greens as the leader of the AI market.
