Short answer: All three are Blackwell‑generation GeForce RTX 50‑series cards with DLSS 4 and the latest display I/O. The RTX 5070 is a clear step up for 1440p (and entry 4K with DLSS), thanks to more cores, a wider memory bus, and higher power budget. The 5060 Ti is the sweet spot for fast 1080p or lighter 1440p, and the 5060 is the most affordable path into the new features
All three are built on NVIDIA Blackwell, support DLSS 4 with Multi Frame Generation (MFG), Reflex 2, PCIe Gen 5, AV1 encode/decode, and ship with the ninth‑gen NVENC video encoder. They also add modern display bandwidth (DP 2.1b / HDMI 2.1b). Translation: higher frame rates (especially with AI assistance), lower latency, and better creator/tooling support even on the cheaper cards.
| RTX 5060 | RTX 5060 Ti | RTX 5070 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Architecture | Blackwell | Blackwell | Blackwell |
| CUDA Cores | 3,840 | 4,608 | 6,144 |
| Boost Clock | 2.50 GHz | 2.57 GHz | 2.51 GHz |
| VRAM | 8GB GDDR7 | 8GB / 16GB GDDR7 | 12GB GDDR7 |
| Memory Bus | 128‑bit | 128‑bit | 192‑bit |
| Total Graphics Power (TGP) | 145W | 180W | 250W |
| NVENC | 1× 9th‑gen | 1× 9th‑gen | 1× 9th‑gen |
| Display Support | DP 2.1b / HDMI 2.1b (up to 4K480 or 8K165 with DSC) | DP 2.1b / HDMI 2.1b (up to 4K480 or 8K165 with DSC) | DP 2.1b / HDMI 2.1b (up to 4K480 or 8K165 with DSC) |
| Launch MSRP | $299 | $379 (8GB) / $429 (16GB) | $549 |
| Launch Date (2025) | May 19 | Apr 16 | Mar 5 |
Note: DLSS Multi Frame Generation (the new 4× mode) is a GeForce 50‑series feature; 40‑series cards support Frame Generation from DLSS 3. You’ll see that footnoted in NVIDIA’s own performance charts. The video below from Hardware for Gamers illustrates the differences.
As usual, retail prices can float above MSRP around launch or during supply crunches.
Do I need a new monitor or cable for these GPUs?
Not necessarily. They’re backward‑compatible with older HDMI/DP displays. But if you own (or plan to buy) high‑refresh 4K or 8K panels, these cards finally offer the DP 2.1b bandwidth to drive them properly.
Is 8GB of VRAM enough in 2025?
For 1080p on the 5060, usually yes with sensible texture settings; some newer games and texture packs can exceed that at 1440p. If you want more headroom without jumping to a 5070, the 5060 Ti 16GB is a good compromise. (Capacity recommendations here are pragmatic guidelines, not vendor claims.)
What about the RTX 5070 Ti?
It’s a tier above the 5070 with 16GB / 256‑bit, higher clocks, and 2× NVENC, but at 300W TGP and higher pricing. If you’re doing heavier creator work (video exports, multiple encodes) or pushing higher‑res textures, it’s worth a look.
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