Fair to say Nvidia hasn't exactly covered itself in glory with the . I won't re-litigate the launch-day nonsense, what with Nvidia restricting access to drivers in an apparent attempt to limit negative coverage. What I will say is that the fact that the RTX 5060 is far from a revolutionary advance over its progenitor isn't all bad news. Actually, it makes this look like a very decent deal.
That said, Nvidia still has the best feature set in town and if the RTX 4060 isn't much slower than an RTX 5060, which it isn't, suddenly a last-gen GPU becomes a very viable value option provided the price is right.
Of course, the RTX 4060 remains an 8 GB GPU, which can definitely be problematic with modern games in terms of running out of VRAM. But provided you're willing to get your hands dirty with graphics settings, you should be able to get the vast majority of games running pretty nicely at 1080p and a fair few at 1440p, too.
But what of the rest of this MSI branded rig? You get an Intel Core i5 13400F with six Performance and four Efficient cores, 16 GB of DDR5 (yes, it is two sticks of 8 GB, not one stick of 16 GB) and a 1 TB SSD. The SSD is a Gen 4 M.2 drive, if you're wondering.
There's also gigabit ethernet, Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth, so you're good to go out of the box when it comes to [[link]] connectivity. The PSU is a reasonable 650W 80+ Gold item and MSI has even thrown in a keyboard and mouse just to keep things sweet.
The whole thing is wrapped up in a full ATX tower case with a smattering of RGB lighting, a few fans and a side panel window into which you can lovingly gaze at your mighty (well, ish) gaming components. And it's made by MSI, which is a brand you'll have heard of and certainly inspires a decent level of confidence.
All told, if you're looking for an entry-level gaming rig, you could do a whole lot worse.