
NVIDIA
GeForce RTX 5060Entry-level Blackwell GPU with 8GB GDDR7 and DLSS 4. Targets 1080p high-refresh gaming with modern feature support at a budget-friendly price.

AMD
Radeon RX 7800 XTRDNA 3 mid-range GPU with 16GB GDDR6 and FSR 3. Excellent 1440p gaming performance with generous VRAM for the price.
How They Compare
The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 is priced at $299.99 in the GPUs category. It stands out with tdp, boost clock, psu recommendation advantages over the competition. It's designed with gaming and budget in mind.
The AMD Radeon RX 7800 XT is priced at $499.99 in the GPUs category. It stands out with vram advantages over the competition. It's designed with gaming in mind.
Key Differences
What this means: TDP indicates the thermal output and power draw. Higher TDP means you need a beefier power supply and better case airflow. Lower TDP cards run cooler and quieter, making them easier to fit into compact builds without thermal throttling.
What this means: More VRAM lets you run higher-resolution textures and handle complex scenes without stuttering. Critical for 4K gaming and content creation. Cards with 12GB+ handle modern AAA titles at 4K comfortably; 8GB may struggle with ultra textures in the latest games.
What this means: Display outputs determine monitor compatibility, but layouts often vary by board partner. Treat HDMI, DisplayPort, and USB-C support as connectivity requirements rather than a universal GPU performance advantage.
What this means: Newer VRAM types (GDDR7, GDDR6X) offer significantly faster bandwidth than GDDR6, improving frame rates in memory-heavy workloads like 4K textures and ray tracing. This directly impacts how quickly the GPU can push high-res assets to the display.
What this means: Boost clock is the card's advertised peak GPU frequency under favorable power and thermal conditions. It is useful when comparing closely related GPU designs, but a smaller GPU with a higher clock can still be much slower than a larger GPU with more compute units, cache, VRAM, and bandwidth.
What this means: The GPU architecture determines ray tracing performance, AI upscaling support (DLSS on NVIDIA, FSR on AMD), and power efficiency. Newer architectures like Blackwell and RDNA 4 deliver significantly more performance per watt than previous generations.
What this means: The manufacturer's recommended power supply wattage is a requirement, not a performance feature. A lower recommendation is easier to accommodate; a higher recommendation means you need a stronger PSU with enough headroom.
Spec Breakdown
Geekbench 6 Benchmark Scores
Full Specification Comparison
13 specs| Specification | GeForce RTX 5060 | Radeon RX 7800 XT |
|---|---|---|
| TDP | 150W | 263W |
| Dlss | DLSS 4 | - |
| VRAM | 8GB | 16GB |
| Outputs | 3x DP 2.1a, 1x HDMI 2.1b | 2x DP 2.1, 1x HDMI 2.1 |
| VRAM Type | GDDR7 | GDDR6 |
| CUDA Cores | 3,840 | - |
| Boost Clock | 2,497 MHz | 2,430 MHz |
| Architecture | Blackwell | RDNA 3 |
| PSU Recommendation | 550W | 700W |
| Fsr | - | FSR 3 |
| Game Clock | - | 2,129 MHz |
| Memory Bandwidth | - | 624 GB/s |
| Stream Processors | - | 3,840 |
The Bottom Line
At $299.99, the GeForce RTX 5060 is the most affordable option. It takes the lead in tdp and boost clock. Tagged as Best Benchmark Value and Most Efficient.
- Lower power draw (150W)
- Higher boost clock (2,497 MHz) within comparable designs
- Lower PSU requirement (550W)
- Less vram (8GB)
- You want a cooler, more power-efficient build
- You are comparing similar designs where boost clock matters
- Budget is your top priority
- You want the best benchmark score per dollar
- You need more than 8GB of VRAM
At $499.99, the Radeon RX 7800 XT is the premium option. It takes the lead in vram. Tagged as Best Performance and Most Capacity.
- More vram (16GB)
- Higher power draw (263W)
- Lower boost clock (2,430 MHz); compare clocks only within similar designs
- Requires a 700W recommended PSU
- You need 16GB of VRAM for high-res textures
- You want lower power draw than 263W
- You are comparing similar designs and need the higher clocked option