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NVIDIA RTX 5060 Ti (16GB) review: A solid semi-budget GPU for $429 (but good luck scoring that price) TechTricks365

NVIDIA RTX 5060 Ti (16GB) review: A solid semi-budget GPU for 9 (but good luck scoring that price) TechTricks365


NVIDIA’s GeForce RTX 5060 Ti aims at a very niche group of gamers. Starting at $379 with 8GB of VRAM, or $429 with 16GB, the 5060 Ti is for people who want something a bit more powerful than the base $299 RTX 5060, but aren’t willing to shell out for the midrange $549 RTX 5070. (And it’s worth noting that card is already selling for well beyond that price). 

In terms of raw rendering power, it’s a minor upgrade over the previous RTX 4060 Ti. But thanks to the power of DLSS 4 AI upscaling, as well as 4X frame generation (the ability to create three interpolated frames for every one that’s rendered), the RTX 5060 Ti can reach surprisingly high fps scores in 1080p and even 1440p.

During my testing of PNY’s RTX 5060 Ti 16GB card, I found it to be a solid performer overall, especially for games that can tap into 4X frame generation. But of course, it’s unclear if you’ll actually be able to buy it for $429, given the already volatile nature of the GPU industry and the additional headache of the Trump administration’s unwieldy tariff plans. Would it be worth spending over $500 or even $600 on the RTX 5060 Ti? That’s much harder to tell.

Now if you’re wondering why NVIDIA chose to offer 16GB of RAM in the RTX 5060 Ti, while it saddled the RTX 5070 with just 12GB, I don’t really have any answers for you. It’s a confusing move, and it’s another sign that the RTX 5070 was simply a bit too mid. Even more curious, the 5060 Ti also has higher clock speeds than the 5070, reaching between 2.4GHz and 2.57GHz. The 5070 is rated between 2.16GHz and 2.51Ghz.

Otherwise, the 5060 Ti sits right below the 5070: It has 4,608 Blackwell CUDA cores that can reach 24 TFLOPs, 759 AI TOPS and 72 TFLOPS of 4th-gen ray tracing cores. The 5070, meanwhile, has 6,144 CUDA cores for 31 TFLOPS of Blackwell shader power, 988 AI TOPS and 94 ray tracing TLFOPs.

The PNY 5060 Ti I tested seemed like a typical budget GPU. It’s relatively small, features just two fans and has one PSU connection. You won’t be mistaking it for a slick NVIDIA Founder’s Edition card, that’s for sure.

None

3DMark TimeSpy Extreme

Geekbench 6 GPU

Cyberpunk (4K RT Overdrive DLSS)

Blender

NVIDIA RTX 5060 Ti (16GB)

8,100

139,756

90 fps (4X frame gen)

4,220

NVIDIA RTX 5070

10,343

178,795

115 fps (4x frame gen)

6,015

NVIDIA RTX 5070 Ti

12,675

238,417

153 fps (4X frame gen)

7,365

NVIDIA RTX 4060 Ti

6,599

N/A

50 fps (1X frame gen)

4,435

For the most part, the RTX 5060 Ti delivered everything I’d want in a sub-$500 video card. And in some cases, it even exceeded my expectations.

Devindra Hardawar for Engadget

At the end of the day, the 5060 Ti is still a slightly souped-up budget card, so there are bound to be compromises. 

If you’re still using an RTX 3060 or an older GPU, you’ll see some huge speed boosts from the RTX 5060 Ti. But think twice before spending well over $500. If the GPU market stabilizes in the future, you may be able to snag an AMD Radeon RX 9070 or an NVIDIA RTX 5070 for $549. The Radeon is likely the better alternative, since it scored higher than the 5070 in most of our tests.

Devindra Hardawar for Engadget

On paper, NVIDIA has done a lot right with the 16GB GeForce RTX 5060 Ti. It’ll be more than enough for demanding games in 1080p and 1440p, even if you let loose a bit with ray tracing. But it’s also relying on DLSS 4 upscaling for much of that performance, which may make some wary about the 5060 Ti’s actual power.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/pc/nvidia-rtx-5060-ti-16gb-review-a-solid-semi-budget-gpu-for-429-but-good-luck-scoring-that-price-130058124.html?src=rss


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