After months of leaks, NVIDIA has finally launched
the GTX 1660 Ti desktop graphics card. Priced at US$ 279, this is NVIDIA's latest
mid-range offering that will replace the aging 1060 6GB while offering 1070
performance.
The GTX 1660 Ti is based on NVIDIA's latest Turing
architecture that we previously saw on the RTX series of graphics card.
However, as the name implies, the GTX 1660 Ti does not have the RTX feature set
of its more expensive brethren. This means no ray tracing or DLSS, although
some features like variable rate shading will be present.
The GTX 1660 Ti is based on a brand new TU116
processor, which is similar to the more powerful Turing chips but without the
RT and Tensor cores. It's built on 12nm architecture and has 24 shader modules
and 1536 CUDA cores. It features 6.6 billion transistors, 50% more than the GTX
1060. Incidentally, NVIDIA's performance improvement claim over the 1060 is
also about 50%. It comes with 12Gbps 6GB GDDR6 memory with 192-bit bus width
and 288GB/s memory bandwidth.
According to initial reviews, the GTX 1660 Ti easily
blows past the GTX 1060 6GB as well as the Radeon RX 590, while trading blows
with the more expensive GTX 1070 and RX Vega 56. AMD even momentarily dropped
the Vega 56 price to US$ 279 but those seem to have disappeared almost instantly.
For gamers wanting to build a new gaming machine
that would give excellent 1080p 144Hz performance in games like Fortnite and
Apex Legends or respectable 1080p 60Hz performance in games like Metro Exodus,
Resident Evil 2 and Shadow of the Tomb Raider, the GTX 1660 Ti is the card to
get right now.
Prices start at US$ 279 for the base models, with the
fancier overclocked models coming in closer to US$ 300. There is no Founders
Edition card this time, so you only have the OEM options, of which there are
plenty at launch, including from ASUS, Colorful, EVGA, Gainward, Galaxy,
Gigabyte, Innovision 3D, MSI, Palit, PNY and Zotac.
