Nvidia GeForce RTX 5060 review: better than console performance – but not enough VRAM
The RTX 5060 is here, finally completing the 50-series lineup that debuted five months ago with the 5090. The new “mainstream” graphics card is far from cheap at $299/£270, but ought to offer reasonable performance and efficiency while adding the multi frame generation feature that’s exclusive to this generation of GPUs. However, the 5060 also ships with just 8GB of VRAM, which could be a big limitation for those looking to play the latest graphics showcases.
Before we get into our results, it’s worth mentioning why this review is a little later than normal, coming a few days after the cards officially went on sale on May 19th. Normally, Nvidia or their partners send a graphics card and the necessary drivers anywhere from a couple of days to a week before the embargo date, which is typically a day before the cards go on sale. That’s good for us, because it allows us to do the in-depth analysis that we prefer and still publish at the same time as other outlets, and it’s good for potential buyers, as they can get a sense of value and performance and therefore make an informed decision about whether to buy a card or not – from what is often a limited supply at launch.
For the RTX 5060 launch, Nvidia – via Asus – delivered a card in good time ahead of its release, but the drivers weren’t released to reviewers until the card went on sale on May 19th, coinciding with Nvidia’s Computex presentation. Without the drivers, the card is a paperweight, so any launch day coverage is necessarily limited – and in many cases, graphics cards went out of stock before the usual tranche of reviews went live from the tech press. It’s a frustrating situation all around, and I doubt that even Nvidia’s PR department will be thrilled that most reviews start with the same complaint.
Following the public release of the drivers, we’ve been benchmarking around the clock to figure out just how performant the new RTX 5060 is, where its strengths and weaknesses lie, and where it falls compared to the rest of the 50-series line-up, prior generation RTX cards and competing AMD models.