- AMD has officially revealed the RX 9060 XT graphics card
- It comes in 8 GB and 16 GB versions for $ 299 and $ 349
- This pricing and a Peppy Spec, Outguns Nvidias Rival RTX 5060 Ti
AMD has revealed its latest RDNA 4 graphics card over on Computex 2025, where the RX 9060 XT comes in both 8 GB and 16 GB of flavor, as it has been rumored for a while now.
RX 9060 XT has 32 calculation units (CUS) – compared to 56 CUS in RX 9070 – which we also heard via grapes, and in fact the rumor mill was pretty stain on the specifications here.
The most important piece of key info we were missing was the price, and we have that now: the 8 GB model will sell for $ 299 and if you want the 16 GB version of this graphics card, it will run for $ 349.
Other specifications include 9060 XT using GDDR6 VRAM and has a boost -watch of 3.1 GHz with a TDP of 180W.
AMD delivered some early performance stages, and apparently the RX 9060 XT is outskirts Nvidia’s RTX 5060 Ti in play when they are not using frame production.
As Videocardz reports, AMD let us know that the new graphics card will be sold on June 5 (which was again predicted via rumors).
Analysis: A Safe -Pupped GPU with a lot of promise
AMDS Benchmarks must be taken with some caution-as with any marketing material, there may be some cherry picking-but RX 9060 XT looks sharp in this test. It appears as 6% faster than the RTX 5060 TI in a package of 40 games at 1440p resolution with ‘Ultra’ graphics details.
Together with the competitive pricing, the RX 9060 XT is a very welcome addition to the lower mid-row of the GPU market. In fact, AMD also showed a presentation glass that declared that the RX 9060 XT gives buyers 15% more performance per day. Dollar than RTX 5060 TI (working with the same battery of tests over 40 games).
I should note that AMD compares the 8 GB version of Nvidia’s RTX 5060 Ti with the 16 GB taste of 9060 XT that sheds something of another light on these benefit metrics -but the relative price still looks good value from Team Red here.
It is also worth remembering that if you go with 9060 XT 8 GB, this uses the full complement of PCIe pitches, while cut in half by 5060 ten 8GB – and it can be important for older PCs that do not have PCIe 5.0. Mainly because (last gen) PCIE 4.0 proves a bottleneck on the bandwidth that is available to GPU with only half of these lanes that are active (but not with the full set of 16 lanes, per AMD’s design selection).
So that’s another win for AMD and it has a strong offer on the table with the RX 9060 XT. The remaining question is without reference boards from Team Red, and the company, which is completely dependent on third -party graphics card manufacturers, will we see the MSRP cloth? Or, if the RX 9060 XT models turn out popular, will prices be inflated by these board-making partners?
Much of the answer to it can be bound in stock levels, which is another variable here: How robust the first levels of supply will be? The good news is that the rumor says that AMD will not leave us on LURCH for stock, and much of the speculation about these new RDNA 4 models has proven to be correct, so hopefully that claim will pan as well.
However, we do not know a few more weeks and real prices on the shelves, unlike target MSRPS set by AMD, will still be a critical part of the equation here with the first launch of the RX 9060 XT.