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Release Date: 2023/05
Base 2310 MHz
Boost 2310 MHz
Memory 2250 MHz
Size 8 GB
Type GDDR6
Bandwidth 288 GB/s
Usage 165 W
Connector 1x 16-pin
The RTX 4060 Ti 8GB is a previous-generation Ada Lovelace card aimed at 1080p gaming. It launched in 2023 and has since been succeeded by the GeForce RTX 5060 Ti 16GB, which arrived in April 2025 with GDDR7 memory and Blackwell's DLSS 4 Multi Frame Generation.
At 1080p, the card holds up well. Across a broad range of modern titles, it averages 130+ FPS at high settings in many games, with more demanding titles like Cyberpunk 2077 at Ultra pulling around 87 FPS native. Frame Generation under DLSS 3 can push playable numbers well above that in supported titles.
At 1440p, native raster performance sits roughly in the 70-90 FPS range depending on the game, but that's where the hardware's two main constraints start to show up together: the 128-bit memory bus limits bandwidth, and 8GB of VRAM runs thin in texture-heavy or graphically demanding 2025-2026 releases. Indiana Jones and the Great Circle, for example, essentially required DLSS enabled at 1080p in its most demanding areas just to avoid VRAM-induced performance drops. Running 1440p at maxed settings in newer open-world titles will push the card into uncomfortable territory without upscaling.
The 160W TDP is one of the card's genuine strengths. It runs cool and quiet in most AIB configurations, fits comfortably in smaller cases, and doesn't demand a premium PSU. For a small-form-factor or quiet build, that's still a real practical advantage over higher-TDP alternatives.
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