Given the mixed (at best) reception of real-time ray tracing on GeForce Turing-powered graphics cards, Nvidia may be modifying its marketing plan to release GTX 11-series graphics cards without the 20-series' RT cores. While this was a mere rumor a week ago, Lenovo's listing today seems to confirm the GTX 11-series' existence.

Like its RTX 20-series siblings, the future GTX 11-series will employ Nvidia's latest Turing graphics card architecture. However, they will not share the same silicon. The GeForce RTX 2060 will purportedly utilize the TU106 die, while the GeForce GTX 1160 will employ the TU116 die instead. Both chips are manufactured by TSMC under its 12nm FinFET node, of course.

GeForce RTX 2060 GeForce GTX 1160 Architecture (GPU) Turing (TU106)* Turing (TU116)* CUDA Cores 1920* ? Tensor Cores 240* N/A RT Cores 30* N/A Texture Units 120* ? Base Clock Rate 1365 MHz* ? GPU Boost Rate 1680 MHz* ? Memory Capacity 6GB GDDR6* 3GB or 6GB* Memory Clock 14 Gbps* ? Memory Bus 192-bit* ? Memory Bandwidth 336 GB/s* ? ROPs 48* ? L2 Cache ? ? TDP 160W* ? Transistor Count 10.8 billion* ? Die Size 445 mm²* ?

*=unconfirmed

At this moment in time, there is no concrete evidence on the level of differences between the two graphics cards. Early speculation is that the GeForce GTX 11-series will lack the Tensor and RT cores. The GeForce RTX 2060 should feature up to 1920 CUDA cores and 6GB of GDDR6 memory clocked at 14 Gbps. It could sport 240 Tensor cores for AI and 30 RT cores for ray tracing. It also reportedly comes with a 1,365MHz base clock and 1,680MHz boost clock.

Thanks to Lenovo's recent leak, we can be fairly certain that the GeForce GTX 1160 will be offered in 3GB and 6GB memory configurations. This shouldn't really come as a surprise as Nvidia released the previous GeForce GTX 1060 with 3GB and 6GB as well, and then later launched a region-specific variant with 5GB.

The GeForce RTX 2060 is expected to be in stores on January 15, 2019.