At first glance, the clock speeds tell a nuanced story: the MSI RTX 5060 Ti Ventus 2X Plus edges ahead at base with 2407 MHz versus 2325 MHz on the Gigabyte RTX 5070 Eagle OC Ice SFF, but the 5070 reclaims the lead under sustained boost at 2587 MHz versus 2572 MHz. In practice, GPU turbo is the more relevant figure for gaming workloads, and the 5070's slight turbo advantage compounds meaningfully when combined with its significantly larger shader array.
That shader gap is where the real performance story unfolds. The RTX 5070 Eagle OC Ice SFF fields 6144 shading units, 192 TMUs, and 80 ROPs against the 5060 Ti's 4608 shading units, 144 TMUs, and 48 ROPs — roughly 33% more of each. The ROPs difference is especially telling: more render outputs translate directly into higher pixel fill rates, which is why the 5070 delivers 207 GPixel/s versus just 123.5 GPixel/s on the 5060 Ti — a 67% advantage that becomes very relevant at higher resolutions like 4K, where the pipeline must push far more pixels per frame. Similarly, the 5070's floating-point throughput of 31.79 TFLOPS versus 23.7 TFLOPS gives it a clear lead in compute-heavy scenarios including ray tracing and AI-accelerated features.
Both cards share identical GPU memory speed at 1750 MHz and both support Double Precision Floating Point, so neither holds an edge there. Overall, the Gigabyte RTX 5070 Eagle OC Ice SFF holds a clear and substantial performance advantage across every major throughput metric — pixel rate, texture rate, shader count, and raw TFLOPS — making it the stronger choice for demanding gaming or GPU compute workloads, particularly at higher resolutions.