
Nvidia Swears You'll Be Able to Buy an RTX 5060 at $300, but Good Luck Finding One
Nvidia's RTX 50-series GPUs launch has been fraught, to say the least. Even beyond performance and drivers issues, the most enduring issue is it's too damn hard to buy any of these GPUs for their base price. After launching all its top-end and mid-range GPUs, Nvidia pinky swears that with the $300 Nvidia GeForce RTX 5060, this time will be different. The GPU is launching today, May 19, but it lacks any pre-release drivers that would help reviewers determine if it's worth beating the scalpers to buy it first.
The RTX 5060 is the card based on the Blackwell microarchitecture that Nvidia said is made for 1080p gaming first and foremost. While Nvidia announced the cards would hit the scene today, it finally released its drivers at 12 p.m. ET. The card should start populating at online retailers in the afternoon. The company told Gizmodo that it was continuing to work with AIC (add-in card) manufacturers to list prices at or close to the initial $300 asking price. Nvidia's director of public relations, Ben Berraondo, also claimed there would be MSRP models available at launch. Nvidia has been leveraging its role as the most prolific supplier of AI training chips to give it a better market position to try and keep its own card costs down, but that won't necessarily save the GPU makers who plan to sell you a new RTX 5060.
We've heard Nvidia's optimistic proclamations about supply and price before. The company launched the $450 RTX 5060 Ti with 16GB of VRAM last month, but even then it was incredibly hard to find a card at the lowest possible price. Currently, Nvidia lists the Gigabyte WindForce version of the 16GB RTX 5060 Ti for $480 on its website as one of the few buying options close to MSRP. Elsewhere, you can find overclocked and stock cards going for $100 or upwards of $150 above the base asking price, including both the 8GB and 16GB versions.
The RTX 5060 Ti stock fared far better than the RTX 5070, 5080, or 5090 did at launch, but the 5060 is already a strange beast, and we don't know how long it can stay off the endangered species list. Nvidia did not provide reviewers access to the cards' drivers prior to the launch on May 19. That means nobody can accurately say how well the cards perform compared to the RTX 4060 family. We suggest waiting for any semblance of reviews before you hit the buy button. This is the first 50-series release that didn't offer pre-release drivers for reviewers, and we hope it's not indicative of the performance one can expect from these entry-level GPUs.
As of writing, those drivers have yet to materialize. Nvidia instead promised users could see massive performance increases compared to the RTX 4060, but that's when factoring in Nvidia's DLSS 4 upscaling and multi-frame gen—the special tech that inserts AI-generated frames between rendered frames to increase frames per second. Non-enhanced performance gains from generation to generation could be around 20%, but few outside Nvidia have been able to test that for themselves. Most of the largest online retailers in the U.S. have yet to reveal their stock of cards, but Best Buy listings offer a taste of what's in store. There are a few bare RTX 5060 cards from Asus and an overclocked PNY card. We'll have to wait and see how fast the cheap cards go compared to the more expensive versions.
There are a few other reasons to hold off buying Nvidia's low-level GPUs. Multiple leaks and rumors suggest AMD will reveal its Radeon RX 9060 XT cards this week. Two leaked listings from two separate AICs suggest consumers will have options to buy one with 8GB or 16GB of VRAM. Of course, just like the RTX 5060 Ti, you really want the one with more memory for the sake of gaming at higher resolutions up to 1440p. There is still little to go on regarding timing and price. The $600 Radeon RX 9070 XT was such a hot-ticket item for its lower price compared to its stellar 4K performance. Considering ongoing tariff woes jacking up prices, we'd be lucky if the company can do the same for its lower-level GPUs.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
3 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Fed Governor Kugler says resigning from Fed effective Aug 8
By Michael S. Derby (Reuters) -Federal Reserve Governor Adriana Kugler said on Friday she was resigning from the Federal Reserve effective Aug. 8, the central bank said in a statement. Kugler's term as a governor ends next January. A Fed press release said Kugler will return to Georgetown University as a professor as of this fall. Kugler's decision advances the timeline for U.S. President Donald Trump to make an appointment to the Fed board by several months. Sign in to access your portfolio
Yahoo
3 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Cubs chairman says team's performance convinced him extending Hoyer's contract was right thing to do
CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Cubs chairman Tom Ricketts came into the season thinking about extending president of baseball operations Jed Hoyer's contract. The team's performance convinced him it was the right thing to do. 'We went into the season thinking about an extension,' Ricketts said Friday. "I think the team was playing well enough that Jed had really proven he put a good ballclub on the field. I've always been comfortable with Jed. He makes good baseball decisions, and he's really built a good organization.' The Cubs agreed to a multiyear extension with the 51-year-old Hoyer on Monday. His contract was set to expire at the end of this season, his 14th with the Cubs. Hoyer was hired as general manager in 2011 and replaced Theo Epstein as president of baseball operations following the 2020 season. Led by breakout All-Star Pete Crow-Armstrong, Chicago was second in the NL Central and a game behind Milwaukee at 63-45 entering Friday's matchup against the Baltimore Orioles. It lost two of three at Milwaukee this week. The Cubs added depth to their lineup and pitching staff before the trade deadline. They acquired utility player Willi Castro from the rebuilding Minnesota Twins and veteran left-hander Taylor Rogers from the Pittsburgh Pirates. They also got right-handers Michael Soroka from the Washington Nationals and Andrew Kittredge from Baltimore. 'I think the way he's methodically gone about developing the right players and bringing them up, looking for the right guys to add, being thoughtful about who he signs," Ricketts said. 'I think all those things have added up. He's had a good first four years. And then of course going into this season, when we got off to a great start, that just spoke to his decision-making and his judgment, and so we were confident a few weeks ago that an extension was the right thing to do.' ___ AP MLB:
Yahoo
3 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Jobs Shock Sends Markets Spinning -- Is a Fed Rate Cut Now Inevitable?
U.S. job growth just hit its weakest pace since the pandemic, and markets are paying attention. July payrolls rose by only 73,000well below the 104,000 consensuswhile May and June figures were revised down by nearly 260,000 jobs. That brings the three-month average to a meager 35,000. Unemployment stayed at 4.2%, but the participation rate dropped to 62.2%, a near three-year low. Some economists point to President Donald Trump's immigration clampdown as a contributing factor to declining labor supply. Federal job cutsnow in their sixth monthare also weighing on local economies, particularly in regions dependent on government funding. Investors are now recalibrating. The S&P 500 (SPY) opened lower, Treasury yields fell, and the dollar softened as bets on a September Fed rate cut gained momentum. Despite Chair Jerome Powell's recent comments calling the labor market solid, the latest data suggests otherwise. Wage growth came in at 0.3% month-over-month, but broader indicatorslike the rise in long-term unemployment and a sharp jump in joblessness among Black Americanspoint to growing stress. Kathy Bostjancic, chief economist at Nationwide, noted that the cracks in the labor market have widened substantially, reinforcing the case made by Fed dissenters who argued for a rate cut this week. Beneath the surface, sector-level pain is spreading. Manufacturing, government, and professional services all lost jobs in July. A partial rebound in private payrolls was driven mainly by gains in healthcare and social assistance. Meanwhile, AI-related disruption is fueling layoffs in tech. Yet job openings remain elevated, and initial jobless claims have dropped, signaling that some firms are still reluctant to let go of workers. According to Bloomberg Economics, the bigger issue now may be that labor demand is falling faster than supply. That dynamic, combined with the broader slowdown and fresh political pressure from Trump, could push the Fed closer to action. September just got a lot more interesting. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Sign in to access your portfolio