Note: This article was first published on 30 September 2025.
Modern graphics cards have become a spectacle in themselves. It’s not just the performance figures that draw attention anymore, but also how physically massive they’ve grown. Third-party makers like ASUS ROG, MSI and Zotac often chase “fastest card” bragging rights, and the result is triple-slot, brick-like GPUs that can weigh down a case. Many of these cards even need a separate stabiliser to prevent them from sagging. NVIDIA’s own reference designs – the RTX 5090 Founders Edition – is comparatively restrained at just two slots, yet many partner models of the RTX 5070 or even the supposedly modest RTX 5060 still take up far more space than most small-form-factor builders would like.
So it’s very refreshing to see the Gigabyte GeForce RTX 5060 OC Low Profile 8G, and as its name implies, is one of this generation’s most very diminutive GPU yet. Measuring just 182mm in length and occupying two PCI slots, this Gigabyte card is designed for mini PC builds. It’s also impressive that all this downsizing hasn’t made the RTX 5060 OC Low Profile any lesser than a regular RTX 5060 card. It still retains the same 8GB VRAM, and a slightly overclocked 2512MHz core clock (standard is 2497MHz). Gigabyte also says it uses server-grade thermal conducive gel to keep thermals in check.
In short, this is as regular an RTX 5060 8GB card as it goes. Only half the size smaller.
So how does this it perform? Let’s find out.
Test Rig specfications
Photo: HWZ
Our test machine remains unchanged from the one used in all of our GeForce RTX 50 series and Radeon RX 9000 series GPU reviews, except for the motherboard (we have switched out to an ASrock), and is powered by the AMD Ryzen 9 9950X alongside 32GB of DDR5 memory from Kingston, and Samsung 990 Pro 1TB SSD
For this review, my focus will be the RTX 5060 OC Low Profile’s performance against our other only RTX 5060 card – the TUF Gaming GeForce RTX 5060 from ASUS.





