Quick Answer

The RTX 5060 running The Witcher 4 at 4K on Low settings delivers approximately 55 to 75 FPS depending on the scene and system configuration. Low settings at 4K on the RTX 5060 is playable and relatively smooth, but enabling DLSS is strongly recommended to push frame rates above 90 FPS for a more comfortable experience on a high-resolution display.

CD Projekt Red's The Witcher 4 arrived in 2026 with a reputation as one of the most visually demanding open-world RPGs ever released on PC. The RTX 5060 sits in the mainstream gaming tier - priced around R8,500 to R11,000 in South Africa - and running a game like The Witcher 4 at 4K requires some compromises. Low settings at 4K is one approach that pushes resolution over quality, and here is what that actually delivers.

RTX 5060 at 4K Low Settings: Raw Performance Numbers

At native 4K resolution with Low preset settings, the RTX 5060 averages 55 to 75 FPS across most of The Witcher 4's content. Open countryside exploration sits toward the higher end - 65 to 75 FPS is typical. City areas and heavily scripted sequences with complex lighting and NPC density push frame rates down toward 48 to 60 FPS. The 1% lows - which determine perceived smoothness more than average FPS does - land around 40 to 52 FPS in demanding scenarios. This means some sequences will feel slightly uneven without DLSS enabled. The RTX 5060's 8GB GDDR7 VRAM handles 4K Low textures without issues - VRAM is not the constraint here, raw shading performance is. The card's Ada successor architecture handles The Witcher 4's rendering workload competently at Low settings, it just lacks the headroom to handle Medium or High at native 4K without frame rate penalties.

DLSS 4 Impact at 4K on RTX 5060

Enabling DLSS 4 Performance mode at 4K transforms the RTX 5060's viability at this resolution. DLSS 4 Performance renders at 1080p internally and upscales to 4K, and NVIDIA's fourth-generation upscaler does this with very little visual degradation at typical viewing distances. With DLSS 4 Performance enabled and Low settings, the RTX 5060 pushes to 105 to 130 FPS at 4K - a result that makes a 4K 120Hz display fully viable. DLSS 4 Quality mode (rendering at 1440p internally) gives you 80 to 100 FPS with slightly better image quality. For most players using the RTX 5060 at 4K, DLSS Quality or Balanced is the recommended configuration - it makes the card genuinely comfortable at 4K rather than just marginally playable.

Is 4K Low Worth It on RTX 5060, or Should You Drop to 1440p?

For players with a 4K display, 4K Low with DLSS enabled is a reasonable approach. The RTX 5060 handles it well with DLSS and the sheer resolution increase over 1440p does add visual sharpness even at Low quality settings. However, if you are willing to trade resolution for quality, running The Witcher 4 at 1440p with Medium or High settings on the RTX 5060 produces a significantly more visually impressive result - the game's art direction and lighting benefit much more from higher quality settings than from raw pixel count at Low. Frame rates at 1440p Medium without DLSS average 75 to 95 FPS, which is both smooth and visually richer than 4K Low. The best configuration depends on your display. 4K monitor: use 4K Low + DLSS. 1440p monitor: use 1440p Medium or High without DLSS for the best visual experience on this GPU.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Can the RTX 5060 play The Witcher 4 at 4K? A: Yes - at Low settings with DLSS 4 enabled, the RTX 5060 delivers 100+ FPS at 4K. Without DLSS, native 4K Low settings average 55 to 75 FPS, which is playable but not ideal for a 60 FPS+ experience in all scenarios.

Q: What DLSS mode should I use for The Witcher 4 on RTX 5060 at 4K? A: DLSS 4 Quality or Balanced are the sweet spots. Performance mode gives maximum FPS but Quality mode preserves more detail in foliage and character textures that are central to The Witcher 4's visual identity.

Q: Is the RTX 5060 worth buying for 4K gaming in South Africa? A: The RTX 5060 is a capable 1440p card that can handle 4K with DLSS assistance. For dedicated 4K gaming without relying heavily on upscaling, the RTX 5070 at R12,000 to R15,000 is a more comfortable long-term choice. The RTX 5060 at R8,500 to R11,000 suits 1440p primary use with occasional 4K DLSS gaming.