NexGen Cloud is adding new weight to the race for high-performance AI infrastructure by incorporating Nvidia’s RTX Pro 6000 SE into its Hyperstack platform. The move gives researchers, startups, and enterprises access to one of Nvidia’s most powerful GPUs without the heavy capital expense typically tied to such hardware.
The RTX Pro 6000 SE isn’t messing around—96GB of next-gen GDDR7 memory onboard, pushing bandwidth at a massive 1.8 TBps. That’s exactly the kind of spec you want if you’re wrangling huge AI training sets, cranking out complex 3D models, or hammering away at VR pipelines. NexGen’s whole pitch with Hyperstack is basically, “Why dump money into your own hardware when you can just tap into ours whenever you need?” Makes sense, especially since compute bottlenecks are the big headache for most AI projects right now.
From a business perspective, this is just another notch in NexGen’s belt as they try to scale AI services everywhere. They only started up in 2020, launched Hyperstack last year, and already saw £72 million in revenue across 2023 and 2024. Enterprise players and research teams are piling on, clearly hungry for the kind of advanced compute horsepower NexGen’s offering. Earlier this year, NexGen also secured $45 million in Series A funding to support its growth.
The RTX Pro integration follows the company’s headline-grabbing pledge to invest $1 billion in what it calls an “AI Supercloud,” a planned infrastructure layer built around 20,000 Nvidia H100 GPUs. While that deployment has not yet fully materialized, NexGen has already installed thousands of units and continues to expand its footprint.
Founder and chief strategy officer Youlian Tzanev has framed these steps as an attempt to level the playing field, giving smaller innovators the same access to cutting-edge compute that was once the domain of only the largest tech firms.
The arrival of the RTX Pro 6000 SE on Hyperstack illustrates how the cloud model is reshaping access to next-generation GPUs. Given how AI hardware demand is off the charts and supply can’t keep pace, NexGen’s strategy is pretty clear: prioritize flexibility and cost-effectiveness alongside pure performance.
