Monday, February 24th 2025

ASUS Proposes that DUAL GeForce RTX 3060 OC Card Offers "Incredible Value" in 2025

Take a look at the Steam Hardware & Software Survey for January 2025, and you'll find no fewer than three graphics cards from the now-venerable NVIDIA GeForce GTX 10-Series lineup. We mean no offense to these battle-proven units, but we suspect that if your machine is still rocking one of these cards, you're probably looking for an upgrade. While we won't deter you from leapfrogging into next-gen territory with a GeForce RTX 50 Series card, we understand that not every gamer's budget can cover one of these chart-topping models.

So here's a wallet-friendly alternative that's still very relevant in 2025: the ASUS Dual GeForce RTX 3060. Available for just about $300 (USD), equipped with 12 GB of VRAM, compatible with the most popular GeForce RTX features, and ready for a wide range of builds with its low wattage requirements and compact design, this is the best budget graphics card we offer in 2025 for gamers who prefer NVIDIA GPUs.
A proven contender that still has legs
Let's set some expectations here. GeForce RTX 3060 cards debuted as mainstream options back in 2021. If you have a 4K gaming monitor, or if you have a taste for the most realistic graphics options available at ultra-high framerates, you'll be happier in the long run with something a bit more powerful. Consider the just-launched GeForce RTX 5070 Ti, or stay tuned as NVIDIA continues to add new members to its 50-Series family.

But if you game at a Full HD (1920×1080) resolution—or at 1440p with DLSS-powered upscaling—you'll find that the Dual GeForce RTX 3060 can handle just about any title on the market. Browse the system requirements for Final Fantasy VII Rebirth, for example, and you'll find that the Dual GeForce RTX 3060 more than meets the recommended specs for hitting 60 FPS at Full HD with the medium graphics quality preset. Next-gen graphics showcase games like Alan Wake 2 will pose much more of a challenge, but the esports titles that all your friends are playing? The Dual GeForce RTX 3060 can handle those without breaking a sweat.

One big reason for this graphics card's ongoing appeal lies in its very reasonable memory layout. It's equipped with 12 GB of GDDR6. Now that GDDR7 has entered the ring, the Dual GeForce RTX 3060's memory performance won't be taking home any gold medals. But it does triple—triple!—the VRAM capacity of the GeForce GTX 1650, ensuring that almost any game out there has enough VRAM available to run smoothly at Full HD.

The advantages of bumping up from GTX to RTX
Back when the Dual GeForce RTX 3060 first launched, one of its main draws was support for NVIDIA RTX features like Deep Learning Super Sampling (DLSS). This AI-powered technology boosts your FPS with little to no loss in visual quality, allowing mainstream cards to punch above their weight class in compatible games.

It's gotten a little lost in all the recent hardware news, but you should know that NVIDIA just debuted a wide range of updates for DLSS—and you have access to many of them even with a 30-Series graphics card. For most gamers, the most important update is the introduction of a new transformer-based model for DLSS. We'll let NVIDIA explain the details, but the short version is that the new model lets DLSS 4 boosts image quality while retaining a similar performance uplift.

All this means that the Dual GeForce RTX 3060 has aged like fine wine. With the latest drivers and NVIDIA RTX features, it's arguably an even better graphics card than when it launched.

Reliable performance that's compatible with a wide range of builds
If you're one of the many gamers who's more interested in upgrading their current PC than building a new one from scratch, you'll appreciate the Dual GeForce RTX 3060's low wattage requirements and compact design. Odds are, it'll be a drop-in upgrade even for an older prebuilt PC.
Check the power supply in your machine to ensure compatibility. We recommend a 650 W PSU for this graphics card—that's not exactly a high bar. You'll only need one 8-pin power connector to get this card up and running, too. Size-wise, the Dual GeForce RTX 3060 offers a 2-slot design and is only 200 mm long, so it'll fit easily into a wide range of chassis options without blocking access to other expansion slots.

Inside its modest dimensions, the Dual GeForce RTX 3060 is equipped to give you years of quality cooling performance. As its name suggests, it's equipped with two Axial-tech fans. Their smaller fan hub facilitates longer blades, and a barrier ring helps increase downward air pressure to the heatsink. These fans will turn off completely when temperatures permit, ensuring silent operation under light workloads.

We go above and beyond to give you the confidence that your Dual graphics card will deliver the performance you need for years to come. This card is built with our Auto-Extreme Technology, which automates the manufacturing process so that all soldering can be completed in a single pass, reducing thermal strain and environmental impact for a product that will stand the test of time.

The Dual GeForce RTX 3060 offers incredible value in 2025
Right now, gamers have an astonishing range of options for their next graphics card. The latest high-end GeForce RTX 5090 and RTX 5080 cards from ROG Astral and TUF Gaming blur the boundaries between professional-grade hardware and the demands of hardcore gaming, giving enthusiasts access to all-new tiers of performance. New TUF Gaming and Prime GeForce RTX 5070 Ti cards bring the performance and features of the Blackwell architecture to a wider gaming audience.
But these chart-topping models are far from your only options in 2025. Even if you're shopping on a tighter budget, you have graphics cards ready to modernize an aging gaming PC. For gamers looking to upgrade from their NVIDIA 10-Series graphics card, in particular, the Dual GeForce RTX 3060 stands out as an affordable, feature-rich card that's compatible with a wide range of builds. If your graphics card isn't giving you the experience at Full HD that you're looking for, grab a Dual GeForce RTX 3060 today.
Source: ASUS Edge Up Blog
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62 Comments on ASUS Proposes that DUAL GeForce RTX 3060 OC Card Offers "Incredible Value" in 2025

#26
AusWolf
trsttteI just wouldn't buy nvidia, problem solved :D

At this point in the game this should all be GA104 which means they could have been 3070 - or a new 3060 variant, like a 3060super why not - with 256bits bus and 16gb if they wanted, that could indeed be a good value. This isn't, just buy an Intel ARC for cheaper as an investment on keeping a 3rd competitor alive, or buy something like an AMD Radeon RX 7600 XT with 16gb.

Btw, on the gpu database the relative performance of this card is still bellow the legendary 1080ti (110%) so there's that, this press release from Asus seems like nonsense to me lol
I agree with you. There's a reason why I haven't bought a single Nvidia GPU since the 20/16 series (I buy a lot of GPUs to test and play around with). But if I was so inclined... :)
Posted on Reply
#30
neatfeatguy
I goes without saying (but someone has to)....



If someone is in need of a 1.2GB GTX 570 - well, have I got a deal for you! $350!
(bound to be a sucker out there - ASUS is hoping to find some which means there should be at least one for me)
Posted on Reply
#31
Sir Beregond
neatfeatguyI goes without saying (but someone has to)....



If someone is in need of a 1.2GB GTX 570 - well, have I got a deal for you! $350!
(bound to be a sucker out there - ASUS is hoping to find some which means there should be at least one for me)
Hey I got one of those too! It's an EVGA too, so maybe I can sell it for $500 for the brand nostalgia!

"No low balls, I know what I got"
Posted on Reply
#32
AusWolf
neatfeatguyI goes without saying (but someone has to)....



If someone is in need of a 1.2GB GTX 570 - well, have I got a deal for you! $350!
(bound to be a sucker out there - ASUS is hoping to find some which means there should be at least one for me)
2025 - the year when the best value 12 GB Nvidia card is still the 3060, as daft as it sounds.
Posted on Reply
#33
SSGBryan
samumSomebody is still trying to get rid of their overstock from the mining boom.
MLiD reported almost 2 years ago that Nvidia had a couple years worth of GA106 dies on hand when crypto collapsed.

GA106 is going to be around almost as long as the Polaris 20 chip (RX 580) (which you can still buy).
Posted on Reply
#34
Lew Zealand
trsttteBtw, on the gpu database the relative performance of this card is still bellow the legendary 1080ti (110%) so there's that, this press release from Asus seems like nonsense to me lol
The relative performance chart is rarely accurate to closer than ±20% for very old cards. Even in the 3060 reviews the 1080 Ti is only about 6% faster and that's in 2021 with lots of DX11 games. Turing and later perform notably faster than Pascal in the DX12 games which dominate today's offerings so they're likely close to equal if not the 3060 being faster.

And that's before adding in DLSS...
Posted on Reply
#35
trsttte
Lew ZealandThe relative performance chart is rarely accurate to closer than ±20% for very old cards. Even in the 3060 reviews the 1080 Ti is only about 6% faster and that's in 2021 with lots of DX11 games. Turing and later perform notably faster than Pascal in the DX12 games which dominate today's offerings so they're likely close to equal if not the 3060 being faster.

And that's before adding in DLSS...
Sure, the 1080ti is also missing a lot of other basic stuff like DSC or latest encoders. But it's still an interesting data point, a card coming up on it's 8th anniversary that launched for 700$ is still competitive with something sold today for 300$. Even in terms of vram, the 1080ti has 11gb, with this 3060 you're only getting 12gb.

It's a complete joke
Posted on Reply
#36
Lew Zealand
trsttteSure, the 1080ti is also missing a lot of other basic stuff like DSC or latest encoders. But it's still an interesting data point, a card coming up on it's 8th anniversary that launched for 700$ is still competitive with something sold today for 300$. Even in terms of vram, the 1080ti has 11gb, with this 3060 you're only getting 12gb.

It's a complete joke
$300 for an old value-class GPU is crazy, but when you see:

3050 6GB for $190
3050 8GB for $230
4060 8GB for $300

their angle of 12GB and similar performance to the 4060 for the same price fits the current crap market.

Whattya gonna do, buy a:

RX 6600 8GB for $200
RX 7600 8GB for $260
RX 7600XT 16GB for $340

Pick your poison.
Posted on Reply
#37
freeagent
I see what they did there...

3060 is the new 3050 :wtf:
Posted on Reply
#38
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
A fool is quickly parted with their money.
Posted on Reply
#39
TheGeekn°72
Oh, ASUS finally made something "budget", that's nic- a 3060 ? Really ASUS ? how do they even have a new supply of those ? *sigh* well at least if it's priced correctl- THREE HUNDRED BUCKS ?? DEAR GOD, didn't think I'd say that one day but THANK GOSH INTEL IS HERE
Posted on Reply
#40
Darmok N Jalad
I’d suspect they ordered a ton of these from the FAB during lockdown and the mining boom, like with Polaris. They’re probably sitting on a lot of chips that just need to be fixed on a board and sent off.
Posted on Reply
#41
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
Asus should put them into their own pcs or offload them to other oems/system integrators/netcafes
Posted on Reply
#42
Wasteland
This card would be a decent option at $200, and a good value at $150. That must be what ASUS means when they call it "DUAL"--double the price.

In all seriousness, it's pathetic that the RTX 3060 is still selling for $300 in 2025, but the current market isn't exactly overflowing with vastly superior options. If I were forced to choose between this and the 4060 @ 8 GB, I'd probably take the 4060, but I'd have to hold my nose to do it. Ditto the RX 7600. Intel's B580 is an obvious winner in this price bracket, but it evidently remains very difficult to find at or near MSRP.
Posted on Reply
#43
trsttte
Lew Zealand$300 for an old value-class GPU is crazy, but when you see:

3050 6GB for $190
3050 8GB for $230
4060 8GB for $300

their angle of 12GB and similar performance to the 4060 for the same price fits the current crap market.

Whattya gonna do, buy a:

RX 6600 8GB for $200
RX 7600 8GB for $260
RX 7600XT 16GB for $340

Pick your poison.
Easy, RX7600XT 16GB, or Intel ARC B570/B580 for 220$/250$ (10/12gb) or even snag an Intel ARC A770 16gb for 300$ while they still exist. Yeah, probably that last one for sure.

Pretty simple, vote with your wallet. Nvidia wants to nickel and dime, show them you won't play their games. If you needed this for work I could see you needing to go nvidia because of cuda or tensor cores or whatever else, but you'd also not be shopping at the 300$ mark, so you have options.
Posted on Reply
#44
_roman_
Just one Word: SCAM

Fast reading the info post - checked the linked graphic card. Checked before 1080p / gaming / DLSS upscaling whqd.
Posted on Reply
#45
Chaitanya
csendesmarkIDK what they are smoking, but I want some... :roll:
If I were you, I would stay away the turd that shitsus are smoking not worth that level delusion.
Posted on Reply
#46
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
_roman_Just one Word: SCAM

Fast reading the info post - checked the linked graphic card. Checked before 1080p / gaming / DLSS upscaling whqd.
See my post above what should happen to the cards
Posted on Reply
#48
DaemonForce
Dear Asus: Repack it for SFF/2U and I'll look at it. The fact that there's so few low profile offerings and they're 3050 Series doesn't help any of us.
Still recovering from whiplash of a favorite streamer showing off some modern Unreal demo like The Bench with no frame cap and it behaves like this:



CPU is doing alright but the GPU, namely 3060 Ti Series is already doggin it.
I've been in a similar storm with another machine for a few months now where I need to choose.
It's a really stupid MX standoff between the Tesla P4 (cheap) low profile 3050 cards (display options) and RTX A2000 (power).
All three of these can do what I want but only the 3050 can and should be switched out between machines for various tests.
How do we go from an edge in power over "incredible value" when we can't even get appropriately packaged cards?
This is probably why I should go gigglebyte for once.
trsttteEasy, RX7600XT 16GB, or Intel ARC B570/B580 for 220$/250$ (10/12gb) or even snag an Intel ARC A770 16gb for 300$
All of these could be repacked too. They would all be FLYING off the shelves.
trsttteyou'd also not be shopping at the 300$ mark, so you have options.
This one's rough too.
Posted on Reply
#49
TheinsanegamerN
DaemonForceDear Asus: Repack it for SFF/2U and I'll look at it. The fact that there's so few low profile offerings and they're 3050 Series doesn't help any of us.
Still recovering from whiplash of a favorite streamer showing off some modern Unreal demo like The Bench with no frame cap and it behaves like this:



CPU is doing alright but the GPU, namely 3060 Ti Series is already doggin it.
I've been in a similar storm with another machine for a few months now where I need to choose.
It's a really stupid MX standoff between the Tesla P4 (cheap) low profile 3050 cards (display options) and RTX A2000 (power).
All three of these can do what I want but only the 3050 can and should be switched out between machines for various tests.
How do we go from an edge in power over "incredible value" when we can't even get appropriately packaged cards?
This is probably why I should go gigglebyte for once.

All of these could be repacked too. They would all be FLYING off the shelves.

This one's rough too.
The 4060 LP is already pushing the limits of LP at 130 watts, I don't think the 180 watt 3060 12gb is gonna make it.
WastelandThis card would be a decent option at $200, and a good value at $150. That must be what ASUS means when they call it "DUAL"--double the price.

In all seriousness, it's pathetic that the RTX 3060 is still selling for $300 in 2025, but the current market isn't exactly overflowing with vastly superior options. If I were forced to choose between this and the 4060 @ 8 GB, I'd probably take the 4060, but I'd have to hold my nose to do it. Ditto the RX 7600. Intel's B580 is an obvious winner in this price bracket, but it evidently remains very difficult to find at or near MSRP.
Agreed. At $150 it would be a great entry level card.
trsttteConsoles use 16gb so don't buy a GPU with less no matter what manufacturers try to shove down your throat. Vote with your wallet!
Careful, you'll summon the 8GB brigade.
Posted on Reply
#50
Darmok N Jalad
The crazy thing is, there's not much for 12GB cards in the market right now. I was looking around for the 7700XT, and it's pretty much gone outside of the absurdly-priced sellers. I guess the 7700XT is already out of production since the 9070 is hanging in the balance.
Posted on Reply
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