For better or for worse, the RTX 3060 12GB is back. Newegg is currently listing the MSI Ventus 2X OC variant for $329.99, sold and shipped directly by Newegg with free shipping attached. That’s basically the same price the card launched at back in February 2021, which on its own should tell you something is off. Nothing gets cheaper in this market anymore, let alone a five-year-old GPU that’s supposed to be irrelevant by now.

This isn’t the first sighting of the RTX 3060, either. Rumors have been swirling around for about 4 months now, and the card has been sighted elsewhere, too. We’d already seen the card resurface in China and Germany over the past few weeks, and it had been rumored since May that ASUS, MSI, Colorful, and GALAX were all getting a fresh allocation. Newegg’s listing is just the confirmation that this is real US retail stock, not a fluke.

And look, I get why this sounds exciting on paper. A capable 1080p card for $330 with free shipping, in a market where everything below $400 has basically vanished? Sure. But sit with it for a second, because this is genuinely one of the more depressing GPU stories of the year.
NVIDIA is reselling Samsung 8nm silicon from 2021 because it can’t be bothered to spare TSMC 4nm capacity for anything below the RTX 5060. That’s the actual story here. AI demand has eaten up so much of NVIDIA’s advanced node allocation that the company would rather dust off an ancient architecture than build enough cheap Blackwell chips to fill the gap.

So, who’s this “new” RTX 3060 actually for? Honestly, a pretty narrow group. If you’re building on a strict budget, gaming at 1080p only, and specifically need the extra VRAM headroom for something like local AI models or older VRAM-hungry titles, it’s not a bad grab. Everyone else should probably look elsewhere. If you can stretch even $20 to $30 more, the value math stops making sense for the 3060.
As far as performance goes, the RTX 3060 12GB isn’t close to the RTX 5060, which we called out as a card that never should’ve shipped with 8GB in the first place. No DLSS 4.5, no frame generation, and Ampere just doesn’t hold up in anything demanding at this point.

Its only real benefit is that 12GB buffer, which matters more than ever now that 12GB is basically the minimum for comfortable 1440p gaming. Still, at the same price, something like the RX 9060 XT wipes the floor with it in raw performance.
Ultimately, this is what a stalled GPU market looks like. We’re not getting cheaper new hardware; instead, we’re getting old hardware repackaged at old prices dressed up as a deal. Even the Steam Machine, the thing that was supposed to shake up affordable PC gaming, is stuck performing worse than a base PS5 while costing more. In every direction you look, budget gaming hardware is overpriced, outdated, or both.
If NVIDIA’s answer to the affordability problem is “buy a chip from 2021,” PC gaming has a real problem on its hands, and it’s not getting fixed anytime soon.
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[PC Hardware Specialist]
Usman Saleem brings 8+ years of comprehensive PC hardware expertise to the table. His journey in the tech world has involved in-depth tech analysis and insightful PC hardware reviews, perfecting over 6+ years of dedicated work. Usman’s commitment to staying authentic and relevant in the field is underscored by many professional certifications, including a recent one in Google IT Support Specialization.
8+ years of specialized PC hardware coverage
6+ years of in-depth PC hardware analysis and reviews
Lead PC hardware expert across multiple tech journalism platforms
Certified in Google IT Support Specialization
Get In Touch: usman@tech4gamers.com


