Upgrade your gaming PC with an RTX 5060 for just $259.99 and instantly pocket $50 in savings

Gigabyte RTX 5060 WindForce OC 8G deal
(Image credit: Gigabyte/Best Buy)

Now is the perfect time to upgrade your gaming setup with the Gigabyte GeForce RTX 5060 WindForce OC 8G graphics card, currently available at Best Buy for just $259.99. This limited-time deal saves you $50 off the regular $309.99 retail price—delivering over 15% in savings compared to Nvidia’s MSRP.

The RTX 5060 is a good entry-level GPU, with the Blackwell graphics card o ffering a 25% performance uplift over the last-generation RTX 4060. It’s $299 MSRP is also acceptable for many basic gaming rigs, but it can be hard to find at that price, especially as the memory shortage is also squeezing GPU supply. So, if you want to score a new GPU right now and avoid the worst of the memory crisis, now’s your chance to get it at a discount.

The RTX 5060 had a somewhat controversial launch, with Nvidia initially withholding pre-release drivers from reviewers. The company eventually released the driver on the GPU's release date, but that meant reviewers couldn’t share their benchmark tests and results until the cards arrived in retailers. This meant early adopters couldn’t check independent results before making their purchase decisions, with some experts fearing that Nvidia could be doing this because the RTX 5060 will not perform as many expect.

Despite that, and even though the RTX 5060 only has 8GB of VRAM and is 15% slower than the RTX 5060 Ti 8GB, it’s still good enough for gamers who play on FHD. More importantly, it can run DLSS 4.5, allowing you to squeeze more performance out of the entry-level graphics card if you don’t mind your GPU adding some fake frames into your game.

Gigabyte GeForce RTX 5060 WindForce OC 8G
Save 16% ($50)
Gigabyte GeForce RTX 5060 WindForce OC 8G: was $309.99 now $259.99 at Best Buy

The Gigabyte GeForce RTX 5060 WindForce OC 8G is an entry-level GPU that's great for basic gaming rigs and those upgrading from integrated graphics to their first discrete GPU. At $40 off Nvidia's MSRP, this Gigabyte GPU is an excellent deal for those looking to bring the latest tech to their basic gaming rig.


This entry-level GPU might not be powerful enough to run the latest AAA games at 4K Ultra and with frame rates above 100 FPS. But if you have a 1080p display and don’t mind gaming at 60 FPS, prefer older titles, or can accept reduced image quality, then this should be more than good enough for your needs. While it might not be worth upgrading to if you don’t use DLSS and have a relatively new GPU like the RTX 3060 or 4060, the Gigabyte GeForce RTX 5060 WindForce OC 8G is still a worthy upgrade from RTX 2060 and older GPUs, or if you finally want to see what having a discrete GPU is like after a lifetime of playing on integrated graphics.

If you're looking for more savings, check out our Best PC Hardware deals for a range of products, or dive deeper into our specialized SSD and Storage Deals, Hard Drive Deals, Gaming Monitor Deals, Graphics Card Deals, Gaming Chair, Best Wi-Fi Routers, Best Motherboard, or CPU Deals pages.

Jowi Morales
Contributing Writer
  • Gururu
    I'm sorry, but the wording here is deceptive. Sounds like we get $50 on top of a$259.99 purchase.
    Reply
  • hotaru251
    More importantly, it can run DLSS 4.5, allowing you to squeeze more performance out of the entry-level graphics card if you don’t mind your GPU adding some fake frames into your game

    Nvidia themselves stated that if you dont get 60 fps native shouldnt use frame gen. (Literally stated by them before)

    frame gen lowers your native frames and if you arent at a good fps native it is worse feeling.

    Add on an 8gb gpu is gonna want 6 or mroe for a game...and any form of frame gen NEEDS more vram use meaning you are at high risk of going over the vram on gpu.
    Do not buy a 5060 gpu. It is literally tossing your $ into fire.
    Reply
  • mitch074
    They really can't get rid of those 8Gb GPUs. Especially Nvidia, where the 8x PCIe bus won't compensate VS the AMD ones where the 16x bus can pick up some of the slack...
    Reply
  • Mindstab Thrull
    Gururu said:
    I'm sorry, but the wording here is deceptive. Sounds like we get $50 on top of a$259.99 purchase.
    Upgrade your gaming PC with an RTX 5060 for just $259.99 and instantly pocket $50 in savings
    I agree. This comes across to me like you get a graphics card at a lower-than-expected price and then get some kind of mail-in rebate or store credit or something in addition. I was ready to visit Best Buy to see how long it would last and such once I saw the rest of the article - but then it turns out not to mean what I thought.

    To be fair, I like seeing a sub-$300 graphics card. But if we can ever get new cards under $200 again, I'm sure the PC community will be ecstatic. One can only hope:)

    Mindstab Thrull
    Nomming ur sanities since 1863 BSE (before the Sarpadian Empires)
    Reply
  • palladin9479
    Ehh this word "Gaming PC", I do not think it means what you think it means.

    The 5060 is an entry level GPU for a light weight PC that the user might consider "gaming" at some point in time, it's not for a "gaming PC". You want a 9070 or 4070/5070 minimum for those.

    Hotaru251 said:
    Do not buy a 5060 gpu. It is literally tossing your $ into fire.

    A 5060 is not throwing your money into a fire, it's just not for a "gaming PC". It's for a cheap PC that might occasionally play WoW, Fortnite or other casual games. The $300 mark has become what the $150 mark used to be back in the day. The GeForce 950 had a MSRP of $160 ten years ago while the 1050 was $110 and 1050ti was $140 one year later. GeForce 3050 MSRP was $249 back in 2022. The 4060 / 5060 are just xx50 model cards with a different label printed.

    All those cards were mostly bought by OEM's and or people on stiff cost / energy budgets.
    Reply
  • Gururu
    palladin9479 said:
    Ehh this word "Gaming PC", I do not think it means what you think it means.

    The 5060 is an entry level GPU for a light weight PC that the user might consider "gaming" at some point in time, it's not for a "gaming PC". You want a 9070 or 4070/5070 minimum for those.



    A 5060 is not throwing your money into a fire, it's just not for a "gaming PC". It's for a cheap PC that might occasionally play WoW, Fortnite or other casual games. The $300 mark has become what the $150 mark used to be back in the day. The GeForce 950 had a MSRP of $160 ten years ago while the 1050 was $110 and 1050ti was $140 one year later. GeForce 3050 MSRP was $249 back in 2022. The 4060 / 5060 are just xx50 model cards with a different label printed.

    All those cards were mostly bought by OEM's and or people on stiff cost / energy budgets.
    If you are buying a 5060 8gb and not gaming with it, you are throwing $$ into a fire. It is overkill for WoW.
    Reply
  • palladin9479
    Gururu said:
    If you are buying a 5060 8gb and not gaming with it, you are throwing $$ into a fire. It is overkill for WoW.

    Again it's for OEM or cheap builds, regardless of what Gamers Nexus tells you.

    The only people I've seen buy them have been those upgrading from old 1650's or 3050's and didn't want to get a Intel B570. Neither nVidia nor AMD is really making cheap GPU's anymore, those relabeled xx50 models are the most we can get.

    Now to really break your brain, those 4060 / 5060 GPU's are the highest selling consumer units for nVidia. Not because arrogant "gamers" buy them, but because massive OEM's like Dell and HP buy them in bulk and shove them into various models like this.

    Https://www.dell.com/en-us/shop/cty/pdp/spd/dell-ebt2250-desktop
    Most PC users do not build these RGB gaming rigs with the "most recommended by techtube" parts, instead just going to Dell or HP and picking one of those models. Those xx60 (really xx50) dGPU's are the Honda Civic's of the PC world.
    Reply
  • Gururu
    palladin9479 said:
    Again it's for OEM or cheap builds, regardless of what Gamers Nexus tells you.

    The only people I've seen buy them have been those upgrading from old 1650's or 3050's and didn't want to get a Intel B570. Neither nVidia nor AMD is really making cheap GPU's anymore, those relabeled xx50 models are the most we can get.

    Now to really break your brain, those 4060 / 5060 GPU's are the highest selling consumer units for nVidia. Not because arrogant "gamers" buy them, but because massive OEM's like Dell and HP buy them in bulk and shove them into various models like this.

    Https://www.dell.com/en-us/shop/cty/pdp/spd/dell-ebt2250-desktop
    Most PC users do not build these RGB gaming rigs with the "most recommended by techtube" parts, instead just going to Dell or HP and picking one of those models. Those xx60 (really xx50) dGPU's are the Honda Civic's of the PC world.
    I'm not sure you have the evidence for the generalization. It's akin to saying that gaming enthusiasts only look at and have the dough to fork over for a 5090. Gaming comes in all colors, been gaming for 30 years and in my hands a 5060 would fit the bill just fine.
    Reply
  • palladin9479
    Gururu said:
    I'm not sure you have the evidence for the generalization. It's akin to saying that gaming enthusiasts only look at and have the dough to fork over for a 5090. Gaming comes in all colors, been gaming for 30 years and in my hands a 5060 would fit the bill just fine.

    It's the same reason car enthusiasts aren't driving stock Honda Civics or that movie enthusiasts are not watching films on laptops. If you enjoy something and are really into it you are going to want to engage with and experience it to a greater level then previously. For gaming this means using bigger GPU's, and nVIdia has capitalized on this via market segmentation. The nVidia 4070 / 5070 and AMD 9070 are where the "gaming" cards start at. They have the compute and memory bandwidth required for more "modern" games.

    I have a water cooled AMD 7900 XTX, which is a monster GPU, and Clair Obscure gets 60~70 FPS at 1440p native (no upscaling). Game is beautiful but really eats GPU resources, same with other modern games. To play at higher resolutions / quality settings you need more GPU horsepower.
    Reply
  • Notton
    Arc B580, also at the $260 price point, comes with a $60~70 game until 2026-Jan-31.
    Https://softwareoffer.intel.com/Promo/Holiday2025Selection of BF6, AC: Shadows, Civ7, or Dying Light: The Beast.
    Reply