The NVIDIA RTX 5060 is a mainstream 1080p card and the AMD RX 7600 is a mainstream 1080p card. Across popular games at 1080p with FrameCoach's optimized settings, the NVIDIA RTX 5060 averages about NaN FPS versus NaN FPS for the AMD RX 7600 — roughly 18% more performance.
| NVIDIA RTX 5060 | AMD RX 7600 | |
|---|---|---|
| Relative performance | 118% | 100% (baseline) |
| VRAM | 8GB | 8GB |
| Ray tracing | Yes | Yes |
| Upscaling | DLSS | FSR |
| Tier | mainstream 1080p | mainstream 1080p |
| Avg FPS @ 1080p | NaN FPS | NaN FPS |
Estimated frame rates with optimized balanced settings, both cards on a Intel Core i5-13500H (laptop)-class CPU.
| Game | NVIDIA RTX 5060 | AMD RX 7600 |
|---|
For most gamers, the NVIDIA RTX 5060 is the better performer of the two — about 18% faster, which translates to a noticeable but smaller bump in demanding games. If you already own the AMD RX 7600, the gap to the NVIDIA RTX 5060 is small enough that an upgrade is hard to justify on performance alone.
⚡ Tune either GPU for your exact CPU & target FPS in the optimizer →
Yes. The NVIDIA RTX 5060 is about 18% faster overall, averaging roughly NaN FPS versus NaN FPS for the AMD RX 7600 at 1080p with optimized settings across popular games.
About 18% faster on average. The exact gap varies by game and resolution — heavier, GPU-bound games show the biggest difference.
A 18% jump is a small step up — usually not worth the cost on its own.
FPS figures are estimates from a generalized model (hardware tier × game load × per-setting weights), not live benchmarks — real performance varies by scene, drivers and game version.