Що тягне 3060 Ti

Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 Ti Review

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The new GeForce RTX 3060 Ti is Nvidia’s latest $400 GPU designed to replace the RTX 2060 Super. This has been a long rumored release, and case in point, we have several cards on hand already.

Although we did not receive a Founders Edition model on time for this review, we do have four AIB cards, including the Evga RTX 3060 Ti FTW3 Ultra, Asus ROG Strix RTX 3060 Ti, MSI RTX 3060 Ti Gaming X Trio and Gigabyte RTX 3060 Ti Gaming OC Pro. That’s nice. Since the Gigabyte model arrived first we’ve used it for testing and will be representing the RTX 3060 Ti on our benchmarks, later on we’ll explore what is unique about each card however.

Now, when compared to the RTX 2060 Super, the RTX 3060 Ti should be a substantial upgrade as in terms of specs it sits somewhat close to the excellent RTX 3070. It packs just 17% fewer cores, TMUs and ROPs. The memory subsystem remains the same, though we saw the same configuration with the 2060 Super, that’s 8GB of GDDR6 memory clocked at 7000 MHz for a 14 Gbps transfer speed. The 256-bit wide memory bus results in a peak bandwidth of 448 GB/s.

The cores are clocked 3.5% lower than the RTX 3070’s at 1665 MHz. As a result the 3060 Ti has a board power rating of 200 watts which is a 14% increase from the 2060 Super. Given what we’ve seen from Ampere so far, we’re expecting the 3060 Ti to be a good bit faster than the 2060 Super, though the real test should be how it fares against the outgoing Radeon RX 5700 XT.

GeForceRTX 3080RTX 3070RTX 3060 TiRTX 2060 Super
Price MSRP$700$500$400$400
Release DateSeptember 2020October 2020November 2020July 2019
ProcessSamsung 8NTSMC12FFN
Transistors (billion)28.317.410.8
Die Size (mm2)628.4392.5754
Core Config8704 / 272 / 965888 / 184 / 964864 / 152 / 802176 / 136 / 64
GPU Boost Clock1710 MHz1725 MHz1655 MHz1650 MHz
Memory Capacity10 GB8GB
Memory Speed19 Gbps14 Gbps
Memory TypeGDDR6XGDDR6
Bus Type / Bandwidth320-bit / 760 GB/s256-bit / 448 GB/s
TGP320 watt220 watt200 watt175 watt

After all, the 5700 XT is the previous generation $400 champ as it was over 20% faster than the 2060 Super on average, so we’re keen to see if the 3060 Ti can finally put down AMD’s first crack at their RDNA architecture.

For testing we’re still using our Ryzen 9 3950X test system, which will get upgraded to the 5950X as soon as we can. The 3950X has little influence on the 1440p data and doesn’t limit the 4K results at all, so for the most part very little will change when moving to the 5950X, or so we expect.

Speaking of resolutions, our focus on today’s review will be on 1440p performance since this isn’t a 4K graphics card. We’ve also dropped 1080p performance as scaling is very similar to what will be shown at 1440p. With that said, we have provided the 18 game average 1080p and 4K data, while also including it in our cost power frame analysis.

One last important detail, since we are not testing Nvidia’s RTX 3060 Ti Founders Edition graphics card, we’ve tested using the Gigabyte Gaming OC Pro. This card comes with a 6% factory overclock, so it will perform slightly better than cards following the reference or base spec, please be aware of that. On the upside, we’re also using the MSI Gaming X version of the 2060 Super which is also a factory overclocked, as is the 5700 XT we tested, represented by PowerColor’s Red Devil.

When we update all our benchmarking data with the Ryzen 9 5950X, we’ll replace the Founder Edition results for the 3070, 3080 and 3090 with factory OC AIB models, we’ll also do the same for our Radeon RX 6800 and 6800 XT results. Truth be told, it won’t make a huge difference, a 6% overclock will typically net you a 3 to 4% performance uplift, but we wanted to be transparent about what’s going on here.

Benchmarks

First up we have Godfall and as expected the 3060 Ti isn’t a great deal slower than the RTX 3070, trailing by just a 13% margin with 62 fps on average. That meant it was 19% faster than the 5700 XT, which is a reasonable performance uplift. Of course, the massive 48% uplift over the 2060 Super is far more impressive.

Whereas Godfall is a new AMD sponsored title, Watch Dogs Legion is a new Nvidia sponsored title and unsurprisingly the 3060 Ti does even better here relative to the 5700 XT, beating the previous generation Radeon GPU by a 30% margin.

The RTX 3060 Ti is also 42% faster than the 2060 Super and just 13% slower than the 3070.

Having said all that, just 61 fps on average at 1440p isn’t exactly amazing performance and we’ve yet to enable ray tracing, though we will look at that soon along with DLSS performance in this title.

The RTX 3060 Ti performs very well in Assassin’s Creed Valhalla, trailing the 3070 by just a 9% margin, though again we’re only looking at 58 fps on average which admittedly is enough for this style of game, though I personally would tune the quality settings for reduced input latency.

When compared to the 2060 Super we’re looking at an almost 30% performance boost, so that’s nice, though the 3060 Ti was only able to match the 5700 XT in this new AMD sponsored title. So it would seem Nvidia has some driver optimization work to do.

Dirt 5 is yet another new AMD sponsored title and we find a situation where the 3060 Ti is slightly slower than the old 5700 XT, despite beating the 2060 Super by a 30% margin. It will be interesting to see how the 5700 XT and 2060/2070 Super stack up by this time next year, we certainly seem to already be seeing a situation where the RDNA architecture is aging much better than Turing.

Even in Death Stranding the new RTX 3060 Ti isn’t a great deal faster than the 5700 XT, beating it by a 13% margin despite trailing the 3070 by just a 9% margin.

We’re also talking about a massive 40% performance uplift over the 2060 Super, so again while the 3060 Ti looks fantastic compared to Nvidia’s previous $400 offering, it’s far less impressive when compared to AMDs.

We are seeing a rather healthy 25% performance boost for the 3060 Ti over the 5700 XT in Microsoft Flight Simulator 2020, taking the average frame rate at 1440p up to 40 fps on average. That means it’s just 9% slower than the 3070 and almost 30% faster than the 2060 Super.

Even in Shadow of the Tomb Raider, the 3060 Ti was just 9% slower than the RTX 3070 with 108 fps on average. It was also much faster than the 5700 XT, beating it by almost 30% and a massive 46% margin over the 2060 Super, making Tomb Raider one of the best showings yet for the 3060 Ti.

The RTX 3060 Ti remains strong in Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six Siege, beating the 5700 XT by a convincing 24% margin and burning the 2060 Super by an incredible 56%.

It’s also just 12% slower than the RTX 3070, so overall a great result and not that far from the 2080 Ti, a card that once fetched $1200.

F1 2020 has been a strong title for AMD in the past and here we’re seeing that the 3060 Ti is only able to beat the 5700 XT by 7%, though we are seeing 2080 Super-like performance from the 5700 XT, so like we said, this is a strong title for AMD.

Despite the disappointing margin from the 5700 XT, the 3060 Ti was 51% faster than the 2060 Super, so that’s a monstrous generational improvement for Nvidia at the $400 price point.

We’re again seeing the RTX 3060 Ti delivering RTX 2080 Super-like performance with 82 fps on average at 1440p in Gears 5, making it just 9% slower than the 3070. It was also 11% faster than the 5700 XT, despite beating the 2060 Super by an almost 40% margin.

The Horizon Zero Dawn results are surprising as here the 3060 Ti was just 4% slower than the RTX 3070, delivering 92 fps on average, allowing it to beat even the RTX 2080 Ti. When compared to the 5700 XT we’re looking at a 31% performance increase, so very impressive and a truly massive 61% increase over the 2060 Super.

We’re looking at a decent 21% performance gain over the 5700 XT in World War Z. Also a massive 61% performance jump over the 2060 Super. When compared to the 3070, the RTX 3060 Ti was just 11% slower, so not much separating these two Ampere products.

Metro Exodus is one of the few games that’s quite heavily CPU limited with the Ryzen 9 3950X at 1440p, and as a result the 3060 Ti is just 4% slower than the 3070. Despite that, the 3060 Ti doesn’t appear all that CPU limited given it was still 27% faster than the 5700 XT and almost 40% faster than the 2060 Super.

Testing with Resident Evil 3 reveals the 3060 Ti to be just 10% slower than the 3070 and this is fairly typical of what we’ve seen so far. Even more impressive is the fact that in this title it was 32% faster than the 5700 XT and 51% faster than the 2060 Super. That’s a really nice upgrade at the $400 price point.

The RTX 3060 Ti managed to edge out the 2080 Super, this time in DOOM Eternal and that meant it was 99% faster than the RTX 2060 Super, pretty crazy stuff.

So basically the RTX 3060 Ti is a beast in Doom.

It was less impressive relative to the 5700 XT, though still a big gain at 42% faster. So basically the RTX 3060 Ti is a beast in Doom.

The RTX 3060 Ti also dominated the previous-generation competition in Wolfenstein: Youngblood, beating the 5700 XT by a 42% margin and the 2060 Super by a 56% margin. It was also a mere 11% slower than the 3070 and 2080 Ti.

In the last game we tested, the 3060 Ti was just 10% slower than the RTX 3070 in Hitman 2 and 27% faster than the 5700 XT, so an excellent result here.

We’re also looking at a 42% performance uplift over the 2060 Super, so when compared to Nvidia’s previous generation $400 part, the 3060 Ti looks amazing.

Average Gaming Performance

Here’s a look at the average performance seen across the 18 games tested. Although we didn’t spend time looking at 1080p performance on each of the games tested so far, we did collect the data.

A look at the 1080p average data is below and as you can see at this lower resolution the RTX 3060 Ti was on average just 8% slower than the RTX 3070, though be aware at times the 3070 will have been limited by the CPU.

Still, for those gaming at 1080p with a CPU similar (or slower) than the Ryzen 9 3950X, the 3060 Ti won’t be much slower than the RTX 3070, though it also won’t be much faster than the older Radeon RX 5700 XT. Here we see a 15% performance uplift on average.

When compared to the 2060 Super we are looking at a rather massive 41% performance improvement, so that’s quite impressive.

Now at 1440p we’re almost never CPU limited, with the exception of two or three titles.

The 3060 Ti is 9% slower on average when compared to the RTX 3070, which is similar to the margin seen at 1080p. The GeForce does extend its lead over the 5700 XT out to 21%, which is a decent performance uplift, while not an extreme leap for a next generation GPU.

Of course, the super impressive leap is seen when looking at the RTX 2060 Super. Here the new RTX 3060 Ti is on average 50% faster at 1440p and that’s a serious generational improvement.

At 4K, the RTX 3060 Ti is seen trailing the 3070 by just 12%, which is a surprisingly small margin. It’s also now 28% faster than the 5700 XT which is a decent margin, though in our opinion neither are really suitable for 4K gaming. The cut off here we’d say is the 2080 Ti / RTX 3070 and even the 3070 might be questionable moving forward with its limited 8GB VRAM buffer.

Cost Per Frame

Time for a look at the cost per frame and for now we’re going to stick with the MSRP data for the 1080p results. We’ll make some adjustments to the 1440p results, which we’ll look at in a moment.

In a perfect world, where the MSRP meant something, the RTX 3060 Ti would be coming in well below anything we’ve previously seen in terms of cost per frame.

But let’s move to the 1440p results to continue this discussion.

We’ll start with an MSRP comparison before looking at retail prices. When compared to the RTX 3070, the 3060 Ti should be coming in offering 13% more value per frame and 14% when compared to the RX 6800.

Now, when compared to the outgoing models like the 2060 Super and 5700 XT, the 3060 Ti is 18% more affordable per frame when compared to the 5700 XT and 33% more affordable when compared to the 2060 Super. Given the performance just seen and the fact that they should all cost $400, no surprises there.

But what about actual retail prices? Well let’s start with pricing over at Newegg. Now be aware almost all of these graphics cards are out of stock and while the Ampere GPUs have seen numerous re-supplies, they sell out instantly.

What we’re looking at here is the cheapest list price for each AIB model, there are three 3070 AIB cards at the MSRP and three 3080 cards at the MSRP. There is a single 6800 that’s just below the MSRP, it’s the PowerColor Fighter and there’s another at the MSRP. The 6800 XT though doesn’t have any AIB models at the MSRP, the cheapest being the Sapphire Nitro+ at $770.

Finally, there’s a few 5700 XT’s at $400, but the vanilla 5700’s are all overpriced, presumably due to a lack of supply at the moment. Taking those listings this is what we end up with. Basically the 3060 Ti is still great value with the RX 6800 also looking very good, albeit at a much higher price. The RTX 3070 also looks good though it is coming in at a 14% premium per frame when compared to the 3060 Ti.

It’s really only the 6800 XT that looks a bit weak here, though it’s not too bad compared to the RTX 3080, at least for those wanting to game at 1440p.

Ray Tracing Performance

For ray tracing and DLSS performance, we’re going to have a look at 1080p and 1440p performance. We’ll be comparing the RTX 3060 Ti with the 2060 Super and the RX 6800, which is currently the cheapest Radeon GPU that supports ray tracing, though it’s not a direct competitor for the 3060 Ti.

As we saw before, the 3060 Ti is 34% faster than the 2060 Super in Watch Dogs Legion at 1080p and with ray tracing enabled that margin doesn’t change much, using ultra quality ray tracing the RTX 3060 Ti is 38% faster and 41% faster with medium quality RT.

We’re then looking at a 36-42% margin when RT + DLSS enabled and then just a 26% margin with both using just DLSS. So while Nvidia has optimized the 2nd-gen RT cores and 3rd-gen Tensor cores, there’s no tangible improvement in performance at the end of the day given there’s less of them. An efficiency improvement sure, but an actual performance improvement relative to the standard rasterization performance, not so much.

The RTX 3060 Ti will offer similar ray tracing performance to that of the 2080 Super, which is good for a $400 graphics card, but how useful that is at this performance tier will depend on your standards.

Personally, gaming at 60 fps feels pretty sluggish for me, even games like Watch Dogs, I like to play at around 90 fps, the input just feels a lot better and I favor input over visual quality, at least when it means playing at or below about 90 fps.

Of course, everyone is different, so if you’re happy gaming at around 60 fps then the RTX 3060 Ti will deliver a good experience at 1080p with DLSS enabled.

We also find the visual upgrade from 1080p to 1440p to be massive, certainly bigger than the upgrade from 1440p to 4K, which is probably one reason why gamers aren’t rushing to 4K. Anyway, if you want to play at 1440p you’ll have to be okay with less than 60 fps with DLSS enabled and you can expect regular dips down in the low 40s. The game is unplayable using RT in my opinion without DLSS enabled.

Again, my personal preferences would see me disable ray tracing entirely in Watch Dogs Legion with an RTX 3060 Ti and instead go with quality DLSS for 77 fps on average which saw frame rates consistently above 60 fps. For this title and likely many others that support DLSS 2.0, the RTX 3060 Ti can deliver a better experience than even the Radeon RX 6800, and that’s very impressive.

Power Consumption

Because we don’t have the base Founders Edition model on hand, these power figures are going to be a bit all over the place, and therefore we’ve tested all four AIB models which may be even better for future reference.

As you can see on the graph below, the Asus ROG Strix model used the least amount of power, but even so total system consumption was increased by a few watts when compared to the RTX 3070 Founders Edition.

The 3060 Ti FE model should use around 20 watts less power, making these AIB models a lot less efficient, thought that’s fairly typical.

Using Nvidia’s PCAT to look at board power specifically, we see that the Asus ROG Strix model uses the same power as the RTX 3070 Founders Edition at 226 watts, which is 200 watts over the base spec.

The MSI Gaming X Trio is way more power hungry though hitting 255 watts which is well over spec, presumably MSI’s been aggressive with their stock voltage.

For performance per watt, we’re using the Gigabyte Gaming OC Pro data as that’s the model we used for all game benchmarks. We’re also using the 1440p data, previously we’ve focused on the 4K data for this which is much more favorable for the higher-end Ampere GPUs which do scale better at this higher resolution.

At 1440p we’ve seen just how inefficient the 3080 and 3090 are in terms of performance, and as a result performance per watt isn’t as impressive as what we’ve seen at 4K.

The RTX 3070, which scales more consistently does fair every well, losing only to the RX 6800. The Gigabyte RTX 3060 Ti Gaming OC Pro though uses the same amount of power as the RTX 3070 Founders Edition and therefore doesn’t score as well, though the performance per watt is still quite good. If we had the FE model to test, we imagine the 3060 Ti would be comparable to the 3070.

Thermal Performance

Let’s talk a bit about thermal performance, fan speeds and operating clock speeds. Starting with the Gigabyte Gaming OC Pro, it peaked at just 67C, which is a fairly low temperature, though the fan speed was very high as 2100 RPM.

There’s the option of a silent BIOS but due to extreme time constraints we’ve only been able to test each of these four AIB graphics cards using the primary or default BIOS. So, 67C with a 2100 RPM fan speed and maintaining a clock speed of 1950 MHz after 30 minutes of gameplay. By the way, all this testing was conducted in the Corsair Obsidian 500D, with a 21C ambient temperature.

Next up we have the Asus ROG Strix which peaked at just 58C, that’s a 9C improvement on the Gigabyte model, though you can expect the Strix card to fetch a higher price. Anyway, 58C with a 1600 RPM fan speed, an excellent result.

The Evga FTW3 Ultra peaked at 72C with a 2000 RPM fan speed, that’s the worst result we’ve seen so far and although the clock speed was 1.5% higher at 1980 MHz, that’s a negligible difference.

Finally, the MSI Gaming X Trio which is another premium RTX 3060 Ti and this model peaked at just 61C with an 1800 RPM fan speed, though like the EVGA version it maintained a core clock speed of 1980 MHz. Based on this quick look, we’d say the best model here is the Asus ROG Strix, though it’s likely to cost the most, and then the MSI Gaming X Trio.

Overclocking

Here’s a look at overclocking with the Asus ROG Strix RTX 3060 Ti, given how cool this model ran we decided to use it for overclocking.

It managed a stable 2.1 GHz for the cores, while the memory achieved 16 Gbps and this resulted in a further 9% performance which placed it on par with a stock base spec RTX 3070. Not bad, though fairly typical for these new Ampere GPUs.

What We Learned

The RTX 3060 Ti is a mighty impressive upgrade when compared to Nvidia’s previous $400 offering, the RTX 2060 Super, offering 50% more performance at the same price point. The 2060 Super wasn’t exactly great value however, same as most of Turing’s lineup, and in this price range the go to option for best performance for your dollar was the Radeon RX 5700 XT. In that comparison, the RTX 3060 Ti is offering about 20% more performance.

The 5700 XT has been available for about 18 months, so a 20% boost in that timeframe isn’t bad, it’s just not earth shattering. Had the RTX 3060 Ti offered more VRAM, it’d be a bit more exciting and perhaps more enticing for someone already rocking a 5700 series GPU.

The RTX 3060 Ti is a great upgrade option for those with something like a GTX 1070, who decided to skip Turing, the ray tracing hype generation that offered very little in the way of a cost per frame improvement. For those with a GTX 1070, you’re looking at a 90% performance uplift on average at 1440p, while GTX 1080 owners are looking at a solid 60% performance uplift. You’re also getting ray tracing support, which as you know from previous reviews, it’s not something I personally find relevant because of the small but growing list of games supported (and consequent performance hit).

Let’s talk a bit about that, and know that this is all based on my personal preferences. First, we’re not down to play at 1080p, especially when spending $400 (or more) on a graphics card. That’s just too much to be spending on a 1080p experience, unless you’re doing it for professional competitive gaming. In my view, 1440p offers a significant visual upgrade and because of this I haven’t used a 1080p display in over a decade – not since 2008 when I purchased my first 2560×1600 monitor, an investment that was with me for almost a decade.

That being the case, 1080p ray tracing performance just isn’t where it’s at for me. These cards need to deliver at 1440p and a sub-60 FPS experience when leveraging DLSS is not something we’re particularly interested in. So for me the RTX 3060 Ti technically doesn’t support ray tracing as it can’t deliver an acceptable level of gaming performance with it enabled, even with the help of DLSS.

On the other hand, what is a very neat feature and something we’d absolutely use is DLSS.

Going from 61 fps in Watch Dogs Legion to 77 fps with no noticeable downgrade to the visuals is a big deal. It’s also a feature we’d use in more competitive games, such as Fortnite, for example, which now also supports DLSS. Fortnite supports ray tracing, but it’s a complete waste even with an RTX 3090, as any half decent gamer will be turning most effects down or entirely off, for competitive advantage, and that’s exactly what we do.

For those of you who are wondering why we didn’t enable DLSS for the benchmarks we just saw in the games that support it, like Death Stranding for example, in short we prefer to show native performance as that’s an apples to apples comparison. DLSS while super impressive, isn’t always flawless, sometimes suffering from artifacts where it fails to properly fill in the missing information. AMD has said they have their own DLSS-type technology on the way, and hope to have it supported by a much broader range of games. That could drastically change this discussion in the near future, but of course, we’ll have to wait and see on that one.

No matter which way you slice it though, right now the GeForce RTX 3060 Ti is the best value $400 graphics card on the market. There’s simply no way you’d invest in a Radeon RX 5700 XT beyond this point. Then again, if availability is anything like what we’re seen with the 3070, 3080 and 3090, buying a 3060 Ti is going to be extremely difficult at launch. Based on what we’re hearing, availability will be similar to that of the RTX 3070. There will be some RTX 3060 Ti stock available but it’ll sell out right away and will be hard to get for the next few weeks.

Another relevant point to this conversation, of the four 3060 Ti graphics cards we have on hand, none of them will be available at the $400 MSRP. The Evga RTX 3060 Ti FTW3 Ultra is expected to cost $450, while the MSI RTX 3060 Ti Gaming X Trio will start at $470, and we expect we’ll see a similar price for the Gigabyte RTX 3060 Ti Gaming OC Pro. Asus didn’t get us proper pricing in time for this review, but rest assured that the ROG Strix model will cost at least $500, at which point you might as well start looking at buying an RTX 3070 instead.

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NVIDIA RTX 3060 Ti Review: Still a Great GPU Upgrade Right Now

NVIDIA’s RTX 3060 Ti has been on the market since Q4 2020, and the first of the company’s 40-series GPUs are now being released. But there’s still ample reason to upgrade to a 3060 Ti in 2022.

When it released, the 3060 Ti quickly rose to the top of the proverbial pile as one of the best value graphics cards, out-spotlighting all but perhaps the RTX 3080. And even though RTX 40-series cards are now hitting the shelves and RX 7000-series GPUs are just around the corner, the 3060 Ti is still a surprisingly good offering.

It’s now priced low enough to act as a venerable stopgap for those waiting for the circa 2025 GPU generation, but it also has the performance chops to keep high refresh rate gamers happy at 1080p and 1440p resolutions. And thanks to NVIDIA’s 40-series release shenanigans, there’s still a 3060 Ti-shaped hole in the market.

With all this in mind, we’ve got our hands on an RTX 3060 Ti to see precisely how well it stacks up as we approach 2023. And, most importantly, we’ve considered whether it’s still a great upgrade from older cards.

Price

The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 Ti has an MSRP of $399, but, in practice, prices of different versions of the card vary.

During the global GPU shortage, all GPU prices soared. Now, however, we’ve returned to some level of normalcy in the GPU market.

At the time of writing, you should be able to pick up a 3060 Ti for anywhere between $420-650, depending on which model you choose and what deals are available. For a GPU that spent most of its shelf life at shortage-induced heavily inflated prices, a 3060 Ti going for just $20 above its MSRP seems nigh-on miraculous.

RTX 3060 Ti Specs

GPUGA104
CUDA Cores4,864
Tensor Cores152
RT Cores38
Stream Multiprocessors38
Memory8GB GDDR6
Memory speed14GT/s
Memory bandwidth448GB/s
Clock speed (base/boost)1.41GHz / 1.67GHz
Power connector1x 12-pin
TDP200W

Probably the most pleasantly surprising thing about the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 Ti is that it uses the same GA104 GPU as the RTX 3070—though it’s scaled back, of course. This is what makes it such a great offering compared to its lower-end competitors like the RTX 3060 and 6600 XT: it comes with a high-end GPU and yet is sold at a decidedly midrange price.

In fact, it only has about 1,000 fewer CUDA cores than the 3070, and it has just eight fewer RT Cores and SMs.

It’s no slouch on the memory front, either. Thanks to its 256-bit memory bus, it has a very wide bandwidth capable of transferring data at 448GB/s.

Unfortunately, the card only has 8GB GDDR6 VRAM, but with such a wide bandwidth and decent memory speed this should only be an issue for the most VRAM-intensive games over the coming years. Even then, it will probably only be an issue at higher resolutions that are streaming high resolution textures.

The 3060 Ti sits in the middle of the road when it comes to power, with a TDP of 200W and an NVIDIA-recommended minimum power supply rating of 600W.

Gaming Performance

Specs mean nothing in a vacuum, and they mean even less without real-world testing. The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 Ti is a card targeted at 1080p and 1440p gaming, but it’s no slouch at 4K either, so we’ve run gaming benchmarks at all three resolutions.

Because upgrading to the 3060 Ti makes the most sense if you have a midrange 10-series card or worse, we’ve pitted it against the 1070 to compare performances across a range of games.

The games we picked cover a variety of use cases. With Metro Exodus, for instance, we have a modern, graphically intensive game with all the latest bells and whistles—plus, it’s one of the best-looking games around. But many gamers will just want to play the latest competitive shooters, so we’ve included a couple of those, too.

Test System and Benchmarking Method

Test System
MotherboardGigabyte Z690 UD DRR4
Graphics cardMSI GeForce RTX 3060 Ti GAMING X 8G LHR
CPUIntel Core i5 12600KF
RAM32GB (2x16GB) Corsair Vengeance LPX (DDR4, 3600MHz, C18)
StorageADATA XPG SX8200 Pro 1TB (NVMe M.2 SSD)
PSUEVGA SuperNOVA 650W G2 80+ GOLD

When possible, we used each game’s built-in benchmark to do our testing. For games that don’t have a built-in benchmark, we ran the same 30-second test run a couple of times for each resolution and graphics option preset, capturing frame data with NVIDIA FrameView. When there were no ‘high’ or ‘maximum’ option presets, we manually set graphics settings and ensured they were the same across resolutions.

1080p Benchmarks

At 1080p, we can see that the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 Ti should get you well over 100fps in most games at max settings. However, in the most graphically intensive of games, like Metro Exodus, it might struggle to hit 60fps with all settings maxed out.

Compared to the circa 2016 GTX 1070, we can see that the 3060 Ti nets about twice as many frames on average. Practically, this means that the 3060 Ti can comfortably manage high refresh rates at 1080p on max settings in most games, while the 1070 will struggle to make the most of 120Hz or 144Hz monitors at these settings.

Much the same is true when we drop settings down from max to high. Here, we see that even graphically intensive games like Metro Exodus should surpass 100fps at 1080p with the 3060 Ti, while a 1070 will struggle to hit 60fps. And in less demanding games, the 3060 Ti will all but ensure frame rates high enough for high refresh rate gaming.

1440p Benchmarks

At 1080p, upgrading to a 3060 Ti might make sense for high refresh rate gamers. At 1440p, however, it makes sense for many more people.

At 1440p resolution, we can see that a GTX 1070 struggles to hit 60fps in moderately demanding games like The Witcher 3, while the 3060 Ti far surpasses 60fps. Again, frame rates pretty much double when moving from a 1070 to a 3060 Ti at 1440p.

The 3060 Ti also allows for high frame rates on max settings in competitive shooters at 1440p, while the 1070 falls short at this resolution.

When comparing 1440p game benchmarks at high settings, we see where the 3060 Ti really shines.

We can see that a 1070 will struggle to hit 60fps on high settings at 1440p in demanding games like Metro Exodus, and it will struggle even in moderately demanding ones like The Witcher 3 and Shadow of the Tomb Raider.

The RTX 3060 Ti, on the other hand, will far surpass 60fps in all these titles, and will even give you a buttery smooth frame rate for high refresh rate gaming. If you want to game at 120Hz or 144Hz at 1440p resolution, the upgrade is well worth it.

4K Benchmarks

The RTX 3060 Ti was never targeted at 4K gaming, but many will still want to give it a shot, even if this just means occasionally hooking your PC up to your TV for a casual game night.

What we can see from these benchmarks is that if you intend to try out 4K gaming, even only occasionally, going from a GTX 1070 to an RTX 3060 Ti can make or break the experience. It can turn it from unplayable to playable in all but the most demanding of games.

Most moderately demanding games should run at close to 60fps on max settings at 4K with a 3060 Ti, and less demanding games should run well above this. A 1070, on the other hand, will almost always run below 60fps, and will often sit closer to 30fps than 60fps.

Because the 3060 Ti isn’t targeted at 4K gaming, it makes much more sense to drop your settings down to high rather than max with this GPU when at 4K resolution. This turns moderately demanding games that were ‘just about playable’ on max settings to ‘comfortably smooth’ on high settings.

It should even allow you to upgrade to a high refresh rate 4K monitor in future, providing you mainly play less demanding games. (Note the rogue result in this benchmark: Overwatch 2. We think we might have accidentally enabled upscaling for the 1070’s run at this resolution. Because we’re unsure, it’s best to discount this result.)

Ray Tracing and Upscaling

It goes without saying that if you want to do any ray tracing, upgrading from an older GPU like a GTX 1070 to a 3060 Ti will help you out—pre-20-series GPUs can’t do ray tracing at all.

The RTX 3060 Ti ray traces about as well as the previous generation RTX 2070 or RTX 2070 Super. And, thanks to NVIDIA’s improvements to the tech, if you enable DLSS upscaling you should be able to offset the performance cost almost entirely.

Performance Summary

At 1080p, 1440p, and 4K, the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 Ti churns out about twice as many frames as the GTX 1070. This is relevant because the 1070 is the kind of GPU that many will be looking to upgrade from.

Putting the GPU comparison to one side and considering just the 3060 Ti, we see that it’s an exceptionally good card for 1080p or 1440p gaming.

Whether you’re wanting to push over 100fps at 1080p on max settings in triple-A titles, max out games at 1440p and net over 60fps, or play competitive shooters at high refresh rates at 1440p, the 3060 Ti hits that sweet spot where it’s comfortably powerful enough to do all this, but not so powerful that it costs an arm and a leg. Which is great news given the seemingly inflated prices of NVIDIA’s 40-series graphics cards.

Should You Buy an RTX 3060 Ti Right Now?

While it might seem a strange time to buy an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 Ti, market realities have shown that the opposite is true: now might be the best time to buy a card like the RTX 3060 Ti.

After such a long period of hyper-inflated prices thanks to the chip shortage, the 3060 Ti’s current price is about as good as we’ve seen and is possibly as good as we’ll get. RTX 40-series cards seem to be priced substantially higher than their 30-series counterparts, so the value offering of the 3060 Ti at just over $400 isn’t to be sniffed at.

What’s more is that NVIDIA seems to have recognised this from the beginning, having pushed the initial 40-series lineup as being one that includes Ampere graphics cards on its lower end. And while the 3060 Ti might not have featured directly in their next-gen market plan (although, of course, it might have), the fact that it’s still a mightily capable card at lower resolutions is all that’s needed.

If you’re after a GPU for around $400 and are gaming at 1080p or 1440p, the 3060 Ti is still great value, and it doesn’t look like this will change too soon. It demolishes titles at 1080p, and it can do high refresh rate 1440p gaming, too, if you’re willing to drop some settings in the most demanding games. Heck, it even pulls off 4K gaming in a pinch. This is just as true now, nearing the end of 2022, as it was upon its release.

Alternative GPUs

Of course, the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 Ti isn’t the only GPU that might have a claim to current-gen longevity and value. There are a few GPUs that compete with it, but I don’t think any offer quite as much as the 3060 Ti does for its price right now.

The RTX 3060 is cheaper than the 3060 Ti, but the 3060 Ti’s better performance outweighs this. The Ti’s GA104 GPU is simply too far ahead of the 3060’s GA106 GPU for the 3060 to be worth it. And, of course, the RX 6600 XT throws a spanner in the works because it’s now often found retailing for cheaper than the 3060 and yet is more powerful than the 3060 at 1080p and 1440p.

The RTX 3070, unfortunately, shares the same fate as the RTX 3060, but for opposite reasons. It costs too much more than the 3060 Ti for not enough extra performance. The 3060 Ti’s GPU is scaled back, but not enough to justify spending the extra on a 3070.

The RX 6700 XT is a viable alternative to the RTX 3060 Ti for 1080p or 1440p gaming if you don’t care about DLSS or ray tracing, since it performs a little better than the 3060 Ti under these conditions. But the 3060 Ti is more power efficient, much better at ray tracing, performs better at 4K, and opens you up to using all NVIDIA-specific technologies.

Finally, you might consider the RTX 3080 or RX 6800 XT. When considering these GPUs in a vacuum, there are plenty of good reasons to opt for either over the 3060 Ti. But the 40-series has just started to hit the market, and this changes things.

Now that the RTX 4090 is on the market and the RTX 4080 is soon to follow, high-end 30-series and 6000-series GPUs are a tough sell.

NVIDIA’s pricing suggests that they want these high-end 30-series cards to be the new ‘low end’ of the 40-series for a while. But this just shifts GPU prices upwards, and what NVIDIA wants doesn’t change how people feel about their wallets.

People might still want decent, sub-$500 GPUs, and when the 3060 Ti performs so well for such a great price, it’s the obvious choice. When you get to RTX 3080 prices, on the other hand, people might consider opting for an RTX 4080 after all. The 3060 Ti has a much more secure spot carved out for it, in my eyes.

Verdict: The RTX 3060 Ti is Still a Great Upgrade for Many Gamers

Plenty of gamers still own a GPU that predates both NVIDIA’s 30-series and its 20-series graphics cards. In fact, the most recent Steam Hardware Survey shows that the most common graphics card used for gaming on Steam is still the GTX 1060.

So, when considering the 3060 Ti, we can’t just look at its performance in a vacuum. We must compare it to the kind of GPU many gamers will be upgrading from. And we must compare it to the current market and upcoming GPUs, to see what its value truly is in 2022 and what it will likely be in 2023.

Despite the imminent NVIDIA 40-series and AMD 7000-series GPU releases, the RTX 3060 Ti is still a fantastic upgrade for most of those with a pre-2018 GPU. Perhaps not for those with a GTX 1080 Ti, but for those with a 1070 or worse, you can expect at least double your framerates across the board, regardless of resolution.

And what this means in practice is that you’ll be able to play the latest titles at 1080p or 1440p for the foreseeable future, without worrying about whether your hardware will run it or not. In most cases, a 3060 Ti will run games on max settings at these resolutions at over 100fps. And in more demanding games, you can still get very smooth framerates by lowering just a couple of settings.

Given the gap that NVIDIA’s 40-series is leaving in the market and given the 3060 Ti’s current low price, the midrange 30-series GPU still seems unrivaled in its price-performance value. Not many would have suspected that this would remain the case even into NVIDIA’s following GPU generation, but that’s the situation we’re in. And compared to the previous shortage prices, that isn’t such a bad thing at all.

Jacob Fox

Jacob’s been tinkering with computer hardware for over a decade, and he’s written hardware articles for various PC gaming websites. Outside of the wonderful world of PC hardware, he’s currently undertaking a PhD in philosophy, with a focus on topics surrounding the meaning of life.

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Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 Ti

No matter which way you slice it though, right now the GeForce RTX 3060 Ti is the best value $400 graphics card on the market. There’s simply no way you’d invest in a Radeon RX 5700 XT beyond this point.

Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060 Ti 8GB

TechSpot Metascore

User Score

TechSpot is supported by its audience. When you buy through our links, we may earn a commission. Learn more.

Reviewers Liked

  • Good performer
  • Beats the RTX 2080 Super in most benchmarks
  • Beautiful looks
  • Solid ray tracing performance
  • Energy efficiency improved over RTX 3070/3080/3090
  • Excellent value
  • Great for 1440p gaming
  • Runs cool
  • DLSS helps transform games
  • New GeForce features: 8K, Reflex, Broadcast, G-SYNC 360, and RTX-IO

Reviewers Didn’t Like

  • Power limited at stock specs
  • Power connector placement on FE cards
  • 8GB of memory
  • RTX 3070 gives an extra margin for 4K today and tomorrow
  • Overclocking more complicated due to power limit
  • Availability

Competitors and Related Products

Our editors hand-pick these products using a variety of criteria: they might be direct competitors targeting the same market segment, or they could be devices that are similar in size, performance, or feature sets.

AMD Radeon RX 6600 XT

AMD Radeon RX 6700 XT

AMD Radeon RX 6800

Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070

Intel Arc A770

Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050

AMD Radeon RX 6800 XT

Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080

Expert reviews and ratings

No matter which way you slice it though, right now the GeForce RTX 3060 Ti is the best value $400 graphics card on the market. There’s simply no way you’d invest in a Radeon RX 5700 XT beyond this point.

The RTX 3060 Ti delivers plenty of power for $399, especially if you’re planning to game in 1080p or 1440p. It’s even faster than the 2080 Super, a card that used to sell for $699. Like most of NVIDIA’s GPUs, though, ray tracing can slow things down a bit, but it’s at least more capable than the 2060 Super.

If you’re looking for a GPU in the $400-ish price range, the GeForce RTX 3060 Ti is the obvious choice. It offers performance in-line with more expensive cards, arrives at the same MSRP as the GeForce RTX 2060 Super, and its feature set it second to none.

If you want the best marriage of price, performance, and features for 4K and 1440p gaming, Nvidia’s GeForce RTX 3060 Ti Founders Edition is matched only by its own step-up RTX 3070 sibling. This card owns the $399 price point and delivers great value.

It’s great that there are even more choices if you’re planning to move to a 1440p monitor. The RTX 3070 made that leap more affordable, and at $399 the RTX 3060 Ti makes it even more comfortable for those looking to leave 1080p behind.

For the price, the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 Ti punches way above its weight class, providing performance that rivals, and sometimes beats, the RTX 2080 Super. At its price, it’s the best graphics cards for most people.

Looking at the other RTX 3060 Ti reviews today, we had a hard time getting price points out of many manufacturers, and what we got was substantially higher than $400, with the ASUS STRIX at $500, MSI Gaming X at $470, and Palit at $440+. From vendors, I heard that “the supply should be pretty good,” but that “it also might not be enough for more than a few hours” or that “we might see $500 soon,” so let’s wait a few days and hope people will actually be able to buy this fantastic graphics card at reasonable pricing.

The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 Ti Founders Edition is just one of a collection of iterations of the RTX 3060 Ti card. There’ll also be partner manufacturer editions with slightly different features available on December 2, 2020 at the same time as the Founders Edition.

Nvidia extends the reach of its gaming Ampere architecture by releasing the best value model yet. GeForce RTX 3060 Ti takes much of the ’70’s goodness and distils it down to a £369 price point. Still not cheap, of course, but there’s enough horsepower under the attractive hood to play the latest games at excellent framerates at a QHD resolution and also make a decent attempt at rendering 4K visuals with acceptable performance.

The RTX 3060 Ti is an excellent card for 1440p ray traced gaming and high FPS 1080p. In sheer value, it’s a winner.

The Nvidia RTX 3060 Ti isn’t the cheapest card on the market, but it’s the most affordable option if you want a current generation GPU and the best Ray Tracing choice for any gamer reluctant to make expensive the jump to 4K.

NVIDIA has a new member of the Ampere RTX 30 series family with the GeForce RTX 3060 Ti, a replacement to the RTX 2060 SUPER which performs better than an RTX 2080 SUPER at half the cost. Perfect for Cyberpunk 2077 right around the corner.

At the end of the day, NVIDIA hit the mark on this video card, it’s very exciting. It still gives you 8GB of RAM, not that 6GB nonsense, and will give you a great gameplay experience with useable Ray Tracing and DLSS. The only problem is the supply of GPUs lately, but that’s an issue shared by everyone due to world issues.

As promised, this review was pretty short. NVIDIA’s GeForce RTX 3060 Ti launches tomorrow (December 2) for $399, and considering the performance (better than an RTX 2080) we saw here – which marks quite a substantial upgrade over the RTX 2060 Super it replaces at this price point – the RTX 3060 Ti is a fantastic choice in the fantasy world in which it would be widely available at launch.