Zotac RTX 4060 x Spider-Man Graphics Card Review




/ 11 months ago

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A Closer Look

The Zotac Twin OC is one of the shorter RTX 4060 cards we’ve seen so far, but while it may be shorter, it does feature a wider heatsink and shroud design, allowing them to integrate to large 90mm fans that run pretty much side to side and front to back on the shroud. The card is a little bit bland to look at though, and I was hoping for something more colourful given the whole Spider-Man box art, and well… this is just a grey shroud, a bit of a let down really.

That being said, if you do like a more understated graphics card, this isn’t a bad thing, and the shroud is neat and tidy, and with it only taking up two slots, it’s going to be easy to integrate into a smaller form factor and slimmer PC cases too.

The spot in the middle of the fan is where you can apply the included stickers, but for a Spider-Man card, only 3 of the stickers are Spidey themed, and the other 5 are Zotac themed, doh!

You do get this pop-out cardboard thingy though, and that’s pretty neat.

There’s a good amount of ventilation on the sides of the card, with a thick heatpipe exposed on the side ensuring the heat is more evenly distributed throughout the heatsink.

Like all the other RTX 4060s we’ve seen this week, the card sticks with the older PSU 8-pin connector, so there’s no need to upgrade your PSU or use some silly adaptor.

The backplate looks great, with a few bits of ventilation cut into it, it should provide additional protection and heat dissipation for the PCB, plus as is often just as important to PC gamers these days, it looks pretty cool too.

At the rear of the card, you’ll find a single HDMI as well as three DisplayPorts. Fairly standard, although some of the cards from other brands opt for two HDMI and two DisplayPort if that better suits your needs.

The heatsink is easily removed, and as you can see, it has quite a large contact plate, with a single thick heatpipe running in an S-shape through the thick plate base of the heatsink.

On the other side, there’s a lot of mass here, with some of the thickest fins I’ve seen on a modern graphics card. It looks more like a large passive heatsink, but with those two large fans that cover almost all of it, cooling performance should be pretty decent on this card.

The PCB is quite small, with the card having four 2GB SKHynix GDDR6 memory chips, and while there’s room for a few more on the PCB, there’s no word on a higher VRAM model just yet.

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