Legacy Nvidia RTX 3060 12GB returns to retail five years after original launch, priced at $339 — resurrected GPU strategy that Jensen called a 'good idea' apparently comes to fruition

Wait 5 sec.

Back at CES 2026, Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said that "it's a good idea" to consider reintroducing older GeForce RTX graphics cards with GPUs from trailing-edge nodes to alleviate pricing and availability concerns around cutting-edge RTX 50-series products. It appears that the idea may now have become reality. After a hiatus that began late last year, RTX 3060 12GB cards (first launched in early 2021) are beginning to reappear as new stock at e-tailers. We've spotted a Gigabyte RTX 3060 12GB card available direct from new stock at Newegg for $339.99, or just $10 above its MSRP from over five years ago. This Windforce card is a straightforward dual-fan model with no frills, but tellingly, it carries a rare Rev2.0 suffix, directly indicating a revision or new model of some kind. That revision number aside, it's identical (as far as we can tell) to the Rev1.0 card that presumably appeared nearer to the RTX 3060 12GB's launch. It appears that different board partners are working to quietly bring back the RTX 3060 12GB worldwide, as ComputerBase notes the availability of an Asus Dual card in the European market. We wouldn't be surprised if that product makes its way Stateside, as well. Gamers may have hoped that the reintroduction of an older product from a foundry and a process node that isn't capacity-constrained (namely Samsung 8nm), as well as an older memory technology, would have resulted in some pricing relief, but that doesn't appear to be the case. FutureFutureFutureThe RTX 3060 12GB is reappearing for just a few bucks less than the far superior RTX 5060, which offers both stronger baseline performance and unfettered performance with the latest DLSS 4.5 upscaling tech. Heck, even the entry-level RTX 5050 outpaces the RTX 3060 in our most recent tests. The 3060's extra 4GB of VRAM compared to those products only comes into play with settings and resolutions where its shader horsepower is already inadequate to produce playable frame rates, so it's more of a psychological advantage than a practical one. So why this product and why now? As AI wafer demand on cutting-edge nodes only grows, it's possible that simple economics dictate that the opportunity cost of producing entry-level Blackwell GPUs for the desktop is simply too great compared to the revenue and margin opportunities of making data center Rubin GPUs for the countless Vera Rubin NVL72 racks that the company is doubtless planning to ship later this year. In the event that Nvidia does prioritize datacenter products over consumer ones, the already elevated prices of entry-level RTX 50-series cards might give way to a situation where one simply can't buy these lower-priced, lower-margin products at any cost. And in that event, the aging RTX 3060 could be one of the few sub-$350 options available to gamers who need to build a new system or upgrade from an aging graphics card. And frankly, that's a poor outcome for gamers, as the RTX 3060 can't run the latest DLSS 4.5 upscaling model at its full potential due to the lack of proper FP8 acceleration on older Turing and Ampere GPUs. And it can't run DLSS Frame Generation at all, leaving gamers to deal with cross-platform solutions like FSR and XeSS frame generation from other vendors. Those technologies are incredibly useful tools in getting the best experience out of modern games, and if they're only available on a smaller subset of more expensive GPUs, that further stratifies the already stratified modern PC gaming experience. We've reached out to Gigabyte and Nvidia for comment on the reappearance of the RTX 3060 and will report what we learn if we hear back.