- Nvidia’s unannounced RTX 5060 Ti has a benchmark -leakage that reveals its performance jump over RTX 4060 TI
- It is reportedly up to 14% faster using the volcano graphics that reproduce API
- It is expected to be cheaper than its predecessor but may be exposed to inflation in view of the current GPU market trend
We are still awaiting an official announcement of Nvidia’s RTX 5060 TI GPU, which has recently had several rumors and leaks. However, a new leak has given us fresh insight into the expectations of its performance.
As highlighted by WCCFTECH, a new geekbench 6 -leak indicates that RTX 5060 Ti is up to 14% faster than its predecessor, RTX 4060 TI. These benchmarks were performed in both OpenCL and Vulkan: The latter is a popular graphic that reproduces API spent on several games and the upcoming Blackwell GPU scored impressive 140,147 points using it.
As shown in the benchmark results, the RTX 4060 scored TI 122,534 points in the volcano, which made its successor 13% faster – and while this may not be a significant margin, the new GPU is alleged to be the cheaper option with both 16 GB and 8 GB models.
It is also worth noting that all the RTX 5000 series GPUs have the advantage of NVIDIA’s new multi-frame generation over the previous gene, providing a better frame-interrolation (further AI-generated framework between original reproduced framework) experience. It’s definitely not perfect, especially with recent driver complications, but the feature comes well for players when everything is back in shape again.
The rumored 16 GB of VRAM capacity can be a confusing capacity: RTX 5070 (which is the higher level GPU) offers 12 GB of VRAM with a 192-bit memory bus, while the RTX 5060 ten is expected to have 16 GB VRAM with a 128-bit memory bus. It is total speculation, but VRAM differences may be due to the memory bus differences, where the RTX 5070’s 192-bit memory bus has much better memory bandwidth and is therefore able to manage with only 12 GB of VRAM.
However, none of these rumors will change the fact that the GPU market is undoubtedly in its worst state ever. So even though the RTX 5060 ten ends cheaper than its predecessor, there is no guarantee that it will remain at the retail price.
None of this will be relevant if RTX 5060 TI cannot live at the launch price
Regardless of its potential performance jump over its previous gene counterpart, the price of RTX 5060 TI will be dealbreaker for many budget players: I am not only referring to its launch price – and I hope they rumored $ 429 / around £ 330 / around AU $ 687 is accurate – but the price of third -party partners sold across multiple retailers.
Both Nvidia’s and AMD’s new GPU -lineups have been met with strong control, as almost none of these GPUs can be purchased at the retail price. This had happened long before Trump’s latest tariffs came into force due to low stock and great demand – so the chances of this trend continuing with the RTX 5060 Ti are very high.
It may prove to be far worse if Nvidia has not planned a reference card for the new GPU: RTX 5070 TI does not in particular have a founder edition model that is short designed and sold directly from Team Green, and this means that consumers have to trust third -party dealers selling third -party models. A repetition of this is a potentially dangerous feature of a GPU climate where scalpers and inflation are at their worst.
We are reportedly a few weeks away from an official reveal and launch so we can have our answers before rather than later … I just hope Nvidia doesn’t blow this one because PC players are in dire need of some reasonable prices.