Nvidia GeForce GTX 1660

Bang for your buck the GTX 1660 can’t be beat. The power efficiency is there, and the MSI Gaming X model we used for testing worked like a charm, running cool and quiet with a reasonable amount of overclocking headroom on offer.
– As reviewed by TechSpot on Mar 2019
Turing
Architecture
Midrange
Product Tier
1408
Shader Cores
48
ROPs
88
TMUs
No RT
Ray Tracing
6 GB
Memory
GDDR5
Memory Type
192 GB/s
Bandwidth
120 W
TDP
GPU Snapshot
Release date:Mar 14, 2019Price at Launch:$219
Type:DesktopArchitecture:Turing
Generation:GTX 16 seriesProduct Tier:Midrange
VRAM Capacity:6 GBTotal Board Power:120 W
Core Configuration
Shader Cores:1408TMUs:88
ROPs:48L2 Cache:1.5 MB
Memory
VRAM Capacity:6 GBMemory Type:GDDR5
Memory Speed:8 GbpsMemory Bus:192-bit
Bandwidth:192 GB/s
Graphics Processing
Base Clock:1.53 GHzBoost Clock:1.78 GHz
FP32 Throughput:5.02 TFLOPsRay Tracing:No
Process Size:12nmProcess Name:TSMC 12FFN
Die Size:284 mm²
Power & Connectivity
Total Board Power:120 WPower Connectors:1x 8-pin
Bus Interface:PCIe 3.0 x16HDMI Support:HDMI 2.0
DisplayPort Support:DP 1.4aDSC:1.2
Max Displays:4
Media & Software Support
DirectX Support:12Shader Model:6.8
Vulkan Version:1.4OpenGL Version:4.6

Reviews and Ratings

88

Average Score

Based on 14 reviews

9.4

User Score

Based on 1,694 reviews

Reviewers Liked

  • Excellent 1080p performance
  • Attractive price at $220 entry point
  • Efficient and quiet
  • NVENC greatly improves streaming
  • Incredible optimisation for battle royale games
  • Low power
  • VESA Adaptive-Sync, HDMI 2.0b, DisplayPort 1.4, 8K support

Reviewers Didn't Like

  • Not ideal for 1440p gaming
  • Reasonable $30 premium puts it close to entry-level GTX 1660 Ti GPUs
  • Doesn't sweep the RX 590
  • It's Turing, but no RTX tech
  • No backplate
  • Memory not overclocked
95

Bang for your buck the GTX 1660 can’t be beat. The power efficiency is there, and the MSI Gaming X model we used for testing worked like a charm, running cool and quiet with a reasonable amount of overclocking headroom on offer.

By TechSpot on
80

Based on the same TU116 processor as GeForce GTX 1660 Ti, Nvidia’s GeForce GTX 1660 loses two Streaming Multiprocessors and swaps out GDDR6 memory for slower GDDR5. As a result, it remains an excellent choice for gaming at 1920x1080 but isn’t recommended for 2560x1440. Just be sure to comparison shop before making your purchase. Hot deals on Radeon RX 580 cards may warrant a look, despite their lower performance.

By TomsHardware on
85

The GeForce GTX 1660 continues the downward price and performance trend with Nvidia's Turing architecture, cutting additional high-end features to bring a generational improvement to the mainstream market.

By PCGamer on
80

Nvidia's GeForce GTX 1660 and EVGA's superb XC Ultra custom design result in a new mainstream gaming champion. This is the graphics card you want for 1080p gaming at 60 frames per second.

By PCWorld on
90

The Gigabyte GeForce GTX 1660 OC 6G might not feature RT or Tensor cores, or even GDDR6 video memory, but it delivers excellent gaming performance and streaming capabilities for its entry-level price.

By TechRadar on
95

Now that the dust has settled we do indeed, finally, have our successor to the GTX 1060 after nearly two years, and it's a good one. It would be a more exciting story if the 1660 Ti had been the $219 card, but we need some more competition to drive prices down. 2019 is just getting started, but NVIDIA is making a pretty good case for their midrange GPUs with the 1660 series already.

By PCPer on
80

The Gigabyte GTX 1660 offers superb value for Full HD gaming, but you may be tempted to spend a little more for the slightly more powerful GTX 1660 Ti.

By TrustedReviews on
90

A tenor de los resultados obtenidos en nuestras pruebas, las GTX 1660 se sitúan claramente a medio camino entre las GTX 1060 de generación previa y las nuevas GTX 1660 Ti, una posición que las hace claras sustitutas de las primeras. También mejoran la eficiencia energética frente a la generación pasada, aunque no de forma drástica al ser difícil apurar en esta gama ya de por si eficiente.

By El Chapuzas Informatico on
80

The GeForce GTX 1660 comes as absolutely no surprise to followers of GPU launches. It distils the Turing architecture further down the financial stack by manipulating the TU116 die in a couple of important ways. Removing two of the full-fat GPU's 24 SMs whilst maintaining frequency reduces GFLOPS throughput by just under 10 per cent, which is pretty much expected. More savagely, however, Nvidia culls the GDDR6 memory in favour of well-established GDDR5, reducing bandwidth by a significant 33 per cent.

By Hexus on
95

Gigabyte has played it pretty safe with this card, and it has paid off big time. They’ve basically used an off-the-shelf cooler design, which I suspect means they can keep costs down a bit. They’ve then delivered a card that has impressive cooling performance to match the boost clocks of the most expensive GTX 1660 cards but leaving £25 in your pocket. For those looking for big performance on a budget, it’s a fantastic deal. The downside is it does look a bit boring from some angles, but to be honest, I don’t think that really matters at this price range.

By eTeknix on
85

The GeForce GTX 1660 certainly addresses the issue of offering a more compelling product. So who is going to step up from the GTX 1000 series? Well, anyone with a GTX 1050 but not 1060. So perhaps the GeForce GTX 1660 is an interesting enough card for GeForce GTX 960/970 owners that are looking to upgrade.

By The Guru of 3D on
90

However, if we focus solely on the hardware and its performance, the GeForce GTX 1660’s ~$219 price tag tips the scales in NVIDIA’s favor. The GTX 1660 offers better overall performance, a newer GPU architecture, and it is more power-efficient as well. Unless there are some major price-shifts as a result of this launch, if you’ve got $220 to spend on a GPU, the GeForce GTX 1660 is the card to get.

By HotHardware on

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