Early in cycle — strong buy, no urgency to wait
Best for: 1440p gamers on a mid-range budget who want DLSS 4 and enough VRAM for modern titles.
Full details →First-generation product — no release history to base predictions on
Best for: Budget-conscious 1080p gamers who want maximum VRAM per dollar. Ideal for builds where a $219 entry point matters but VRAM headroom is still a priority.
Full details →| NVIDIA RTX 5060 Ti | Intel Arc B570 | |
|---|---|---|
| Tier | Mid-range | Entry |
| Generation | RTX 5000 | Arc Battlemage |
| VRAM | 16 GB | 10 GB |
| Memory Type | GDDR7 | GDDR6 |
| TDP | 180W | 150W |
| Upscaling | DLSS4 | XeSS 2 |
| Ray Tracing | ✅ | ✅ |
| Launch MSRP | $429 | $219 |
| Released | Apr 16, 2025 | Jan 16, 2025 |
| Cycle length | ~800 days | — |
| Cycle advice | Buy | Caution |
| Deals advice | Caution | Caution |
| Successor | — | — |
Finally resolves the VRAM debate — double the memory of the RTX 4060 Ti 8GB at a competitive mid-range price.
Multi-frame generation brings high frame rates to 1440p without brute-force rendering.
Efficient enough for mid-range builds without a PSU upgrade.
2GB more VRAM than NVIDIA's RTX 5050 (~$189) and RTX 5060 ($299) — the best VRAM-per-dollar in the sub-$225 GPU market.
A full 40W lower than the B580 and 20W lower than most competing NVIDIA cards at this price. No PSU upgrade needed for most systems.
Intel's second-generation AI upscaler delivers strong image quality in supported titles, with a growing catalogue of compatible games.