Nvidia RTX 3060 Ti performance just leaked — and AMD should be worried

Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 Ti
(Image credit: VideoCardz)

It’s looking ever more likely that the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 Ti will be coming very soon, as a new slide showing off its performance has been leaked. And it reveals some impressive gaming power.

Spotted by VideoCardz the slide appears to be from a presentation that’s likely to form part of the GeForce RTX 3080 Ti’s launch, and it shows how what’s set to be the cheaper card in the GeForce RTX 3000-series will pummel older high-end Nvidia GPUs. The graphs show how it can outpace the GeForce RTX 2080 Super, a very powerful last-gen graphics card. 

In a suite of games, including Red Dead Redemption 2, Watch Dogs Legion, Control, and Doom Eternal, the RTX 3060 Ti easily defeated the RTX 2080 Super at 1440p resolution when paired with a 10th Gen Intel Core i9 processor. It also surges past the GeForce RTX 2060 Super, the card it will replace.  

GeForce RTX 3060 Ti leaked performance

(Image credit: VideoCardz)

These all make for impressive figures. We already know the $499 Nvidia GeForce RTX 3070 can defeat the RTX 2080 Super and evner the higher end GeForce RTX 2080 Ti. But for a card that’s expected cost $400 or less, the RTX 3060 Ti appears to deliver a lot of bang for its buck. 

The one caveat here is gaming at 1440p arguably skews benchmarks in the RTX 3060 Ti’s favor, as the RTX 2080 Super was more of a 4K GPU. As such, the older card might have more room to show off its performance if the benchmarks were conducted at 4K. 

However, high-end 4K gaming is more the realm of the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080, with the RTX 3070 also being a 1440p to 4K GPU. So we’d not expect the RTX 3060 Ti to compete at 4K. 

And the performance it’s delivering in these benchmarks, particularly in games with ray tracing enabled ,is very promising. The RTX 3060 Ti and likely the less powerful RTX 3060, could be mainstream graphics cards that deliver stellar 1440p performance and make ray-tracing at 60 fps a realistic goal for gaming PCs that don't have high-end specs. 

This is all very promising for Nvidia, particularly as AMD and its new Big Navi range doesn't have a Radeon RX 6000-series graphics card to compete at the $400 mark. We’d expect that to change come 2021. But so far it looks like the GeForce RTX 3060 Ti could be a killer mainstream graphics card for PC gamers on a constrained budget. 

Roland Moore-Colyer

Roland Moore-Colyer a Managing Editor at Tom’s Guide with a focus on news, features and opinion articles. He often writes about gaming, phones, laptops and other bits of hardware; he’s also got an interest in cars. When not at his desk Roland can be found wandering around London, often with a look of curiosity on his face. 

  • Ah, marketing slides, the best 'proof' we could ask for!

    This generation is probably the biggest disappointment in recent PC history. $400 MSRP for a card that targets 2K in 2020 is far from being exciting, and when you factor in VAT, the fact that the exchange rate is kept 1:1, the retailers doing scalping and so on, this card will end up costing 550€ in my country, I could bet my balls.
    The 3070 was 500$ MSRP, 519€ MSRP in my country, actually retails for 700€+. For a card that can't really do 4K. What a complete joke.
    I went from being amazed to disappointed to the point of giving up upgrading in less than a month.
    Reply