AMD has taken the wraps off the RX 9060 XT at Computex 2025, and it looks like a graphics card of few surprises so far. That being said, some of the technical info is still a little thin on the ground—and it’s making me wonder if AMD’s latest budget card has got the goods to take on the RTX 5060 Ti with which it will likely compete.
Featuring 32 RDNA 4 Compute Units, 32 RT Accelerators, 64 AI Accelerators, and a 3.13 GHz boost clock, the RX 9060 XT looks, as our Nick aptly put it when summarising the earlier leaks, a bit like an RX 9070 XT chopped in two.

It’ll come in 8 GB and 16 GB variants, much like the RTX 5060 Ti. While AMD hasn’t yet released any performance figures yet for the new card, many will be hoping that it does for the RTX 5060 Ti what the RX 9070 XT did for the RTX 5070 Ti—give it a darn good run for its money, and even the odd thrashing.
However, what’s still unclear is whether the new AMD card makes use of a significant amount of L3 Infinity Cache to make up for the fact that it’ll likely use slower, GDDR6 memory in comparison to the speedier 28 Gbps GDDR7 in the RTX 5060 Ti.
Here’s AMD’s figures for the RX 9060 XT versus the RTX 5060 Ti at 1440p. Of course, these are not our independent benchmarks, but it looks like a promising start, at least. 6% faster, for cheaper? That’d be grand.

It looks fairly power efficient, too, with a 150-182 W TGP in comparison to the RTX 5060 Ti’s similarly power-sipping 180 W max figure. Comparing the specs sheets of the two is a bit of an exercise in frustration when one is still something of a mystery, but in many regards they appear to be trading blows, at the very least.
Being an RX 9000-series card, buyers will also be able to take advantage of FSR 4 to boost frame rates—although it won’t have the Multi Frame Generation advantage the new RTX 50-series cards lean on for surprising AI-enhanced frame rate figures.

Catch up with Computex 2025: We’re stalking the halls of Taiwan’s biggest tech show once again to see what Nvidia, AMD, Intel, Asus, Gigabyte, MSI and more have to offer.
While the RTX 5060 Ti has an MSRP of $379 for the 8 GB model and $429 for the 16 GB variant, the latter is often found for much more, and availability still seems to be somewhat patchy.
Starting at $349 (Presumably for the 8 GB version), the little RX 9060 XT might be able to pull of AMD’s party trick once more if stocks are plentiful. Time will tell.
That’s a big set of ifs, buts, and maybes. It’s a bit of a cutie with that little twin-fan reference design, though, isn’t it? Mind you, being a reference card it won’t be the one you actually buy, so I hope the AIB partners create designs of similar size. Anyway, here’s hoping it’s more of a Jack Russell terrier than a handbag pooch, come the benchmarks. Fingers crossed, yes?