GeForce GTX 1060 vs Radeon R7 250X

NVIDIA

GeForce GTX 1060

2016Core: 1607 MHzBoost: 1733 MHz
GTX family
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VS
AMD

Radeon R7 250X

2014Boost: 1000 MHz
Similar parts
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GeForce GTX 1060 vs Radeon R7 250X Performance Spectrum

About G3D Mark

G3D Mark is a standard benchmark that measures graphics performance in real-world gaming scenarios. It simplifies comparing cards from different brands, where higher scores directly correlate with better fps and smoother gaming experiences.

GeForce GTX 1060 vs Radeon R7 250X FPS Benchmarks

Predicted gaming performance across popular games. Tested paired with Ryzen 7 9800X3D to isolate GPU performance.

Search any supported game below to compare 1080p FPS for both components.

GeForce GTX 1060 vs Radeon R7 250X: Pros, Cons & Final Verdict

See where each GPU makes more sense in practice: raw FPS, VRAM, features, power draw, pricing, and long-term headroom.

GeForce GTX 1060

2016

Why buy it

  • 510.8% more average FPS across 50 tracked games in our benchmark data.
  • Delivers 76.3% more G3D Mark for each dollar spent, at 40.4 vs 22.9 G3D/$ ($249 MSRP vs $99 MSRP).
  • 200% more VRAM for high-resolution textures and newer games (6 GB vs 2 GB).
  • Radeon R7 250X is already obsolete for modern gaming, so GeForce GTX 1060 is the less risky modern option long term.
  • Measures 173mm instead of 210mm, a 37mm shorter card that is more SFF-friendly.

Trade-offs

  • 2016 hardware with 6 GB of VRAM already sits in legacy territory for modern games.
  • 125% higher power demand at 180W vs 80W.

Radeon R7 250X

2014

Why buy it

  • Costs $150 less on MSRP ($99 MSRP vs $249 MSRP).
  • Draws 80W instead of 180W, a 100W reduction.

Trade-offs

  • Lower average FPS than GeForce GTX 1060 across 50 tracked games in our benchmark data.
  • Less VRAM, with 2 GB vs 6 GB for high-resolution textures and newer games.
  • 2014 hardware with 2 GB of VRAM is already well past its comfortable zone for modern gaming, so it is hard to recommend now.
  • Lower G3D Mark per dollar, at 22.9 vs 40.4 G3D/$ ($99 MSRP vs $249 MSRP).
  • 21.4% longer card at 210mm vs 173mm.

Quick Answers

Which GPU is faster for gaming right now?
GeForce GTX 1060 is the faster gaming card right now. In our data, it leads by 510.8% in average FPS across 50 tracked games in our benchmark data and by 343.5% in PassMark G3D (10,064 vs 2,269), so the answer here is pretty clean.
Which GPU is the safer long-term pick for 2026 and beyond?
GeForce GTX 1060 is the safer long-term pick for 2026 and beyond. The case is simple: 6 GB vs 2 GB of VRAM, a 16nm process instead of 28nm, and a newer 2016 generation instead of 2014. That gives it more room for heavier textures and higher settings over time.
Which GPU is the better buy today?
GeForce GTX 1060 makes the most sense to buy today. It is $150 more expensive on MSRP at $249 vs $99, and it leads G3D-per-dollar by 76.3% (40.4 vs 22.9), so the value case lines up with the gaming result.

GeForce GTX 1060 vs Radeon R7 250X Technical Specifications

Side-by-side specs, architecture details, clocks, memory, power, and platform differences.

NVIDIA

GeForce GTX 1060

The GeForce GTX 1060 is manufactured by NVIDIA. It was released in May 27 2016. It features the Pascal architecture. The core clock ranges from 1607 MHz to 1733 MHz. It has 2560 shading units. The thermal design power (TDP) is 180W. Manufactured using 16 nm process technology. G3D Mark benchmark score: 10,064 points. Launch price was $599.

AMD

Radeon R7 250X

The Radeon R7 250X is manufactured by AMD. It was released in February 13 2014. It features the GCN 1.0 architecture. The boost clock speed is 1000 MHz. It has 640 shading units. The thermal design power (TDP) is 80W. Manufactured using 28 nm process technology. G3D Mark benchmark score: 2,269 points. Launch price was $99.

Graphics Performance

In G3D Mark, the GeForce GTX 1060 scores 10,064 versus the Radeon R7 250X's 2,269 — the GeForce GTX 1060 leads by 343.5%. The GeForce GTX 1060 is built on Pascal while the Radeon R7 250X uses GCN 1.0, both on 16 nm vs 28 nm. Shader units: 2,560 (GeForce GTX 1060) vs 640 (Radeon R7 250X). Raw compute: 8.873 TFLOPS (GeForce GTX 1060) vs 1.216 TFLOPS (Radeon R7 250X). Boost clocks: 1733 MHz vs 1000 MHz.

FeatureGeForce GTX 1060Radeon R7 250X
G3D Mark Score
10,064+344%
2,269
Architecture
Pascal
GCN 1.0
Process Node
16 nm
28 nm
Shading Units
2560+300%
640
Compute (TFLOPS)
8.873 TFLOPS+630%
1.216 TFLOPS
Boost Clock
1733 MHz+73%
1000 MHz
ROPs
64+300%
16
TMUs
160+300%
40
L1 Cache
960 KB+500%
160 KB
L2 Cache
2 MB+700%
0.25 MB

Advanced Features (DLSS/FSR)

The GeForce GTX 1060 gets NVIDIA DLSS, which still tends to look cleaner in motion. The Radeon R7 250X leans on FSR, which is flexible and widely supported, but usually a bit rougher at the same settings.

FeatureGeForce GTX 1060Radeon R7 250X
Upscaling Tech
Upscaling support
FSR Upscaling / FSR 4
Frame Generation
Not Supported
Not Supported
Ray Reconstruction
No
No
Low Latency
NVIDIA Reflex
AMD Anti-Lag
💾

Video Memory (VRAM)

The GeForce GTX 1060 has 6 GB of VRAM, while the Radeon R7 250X carries 2 GB. GeForce GTX 1060 gives you 200% more memory capacity, which matters more once you move into heavier textures, mods, or higher resolutions. Memory bandwidth: 192 GB/s (GeForce GTX 1060) vs 72 GB/s (Radeon R7 250X) — a 166.7% advantage for the GeForce GTX 1060. Memory bus width is 192-bit on the GeForce GTX 1060 and 128-bit on the Radeon R7 250X. L2 Cache: 2 MB (GeForce GTX 1060) vs 0.25 MB (Radeon R7 250X) — the GeForce GTX 1060 has significantly larger on-die cache to reduce VRAM reliance.

FeatureGeForce GTX 1060Radeon R7 250X
VRAM Capacity
6 GB+200%
2 GB
Memory Type
GDDR5
GDDR5
Memory Bandwidth
192 GB/s+167%
72 GB/s
Bus Width
192-bit+50%
128-bit
L2 Cache
2 MB+700%
0.25 MB
🖥️

Display & API Support

DirectX support: 12 (GeForce GTX 1060) vs 12 (FL 11_1) (Radeon R7 250X). Vulkan: 1.3 vs 1.2. OpenGL: 4.5 vs 4.6. Maximum simultaneous displays: 4 vs 2.

FeatureGeForce GTX 1060Radeon R7 250X
DirectX
12
12 (FL 11_1)
Vulkan
1.3+8%
1.2
OpenGL
4.5
4.6+2%
Max Displays
4+100%
2
🎬

Media & Encoding

Hardware encoder: NVENC (Pascal) (GeForce GTX 1060) vs VCE 1.0 (Radeon R7 250X). Decoder: NVDEC (Pascal) vs UVD 4.2. Supported codecs: H.264,H.265/HEVC (GeForce GTX 1060) vs H.264,VC-1,MPEG-2,MPEG-4 Part 2 (Radeon R7 250X).

FeatureGeForce GTX 1060Radeon R7 250X
Encoder
NVENC (Pascal)
VCE 1.0
Decoder
NVDEC (Pascal)
UVD 4.2
Codecs
H.264,H.265/HEVC
H.264,VC-1,MPEG-2,MPEG-4 Part 2
🔌

Power & Dimensions

The GeForce GTX 1060 draws 180W versus the Radeon R7 250X's 80W — a 76.9% difference. The Radeon R7 250X is more power-efficient. Recommended PSU: 400W (GeForce GTX 1060) vs 400W (Radeon R7 250X). Power connectors: 6-pin vs 1x 6-pin. Card length: 173mm vs 210mm, occupying 2 vs 2 slots.

FeatureGeForce GTX 1060Radeon R7 250X
TDP
180W
80W-56%
Recommended PSU
400W
400W
Power Connector
6-pin
1x 6-pin
Length
173mm
210mm
Height
111mm
111mm
Slots
2
2
Temp (Load)
70°C
Perf/Watt
55.9+97%
28.4
💰

Value Analysis

At launch, the GeForce GTX 1060 came in at $249, while the Radeon R7 250X launched at $99. On MSRP, Radeon R7 250X was 60.2% cheaper ($150 less). Performance per dollar on MSRP (G3D Mark / MSRP): 40.4 (GeForce GTX 1060) vs 22.9 (Radeon R7 250X) — the GeForce GTX 1060 offers 76.4% better value. The newer card here is GeForce GTX 1060 (2016 vs 2014).

FeatureGeForce GTX 1060Radeon R7 250X
MSRP
$249
$99-60%
Performance per Dollar
40.4+76%
22.9
Codename
GP104
Cape Verde
Release
May 27 2016
February 13 2014
Ranking
#137
#655

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