The speculation surrounding the updated memory module is that it would offer the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 Non-Ti graphics card both higher memory bandwidths and faster speeds. Additionally, the TDP would also increase. The Lenovo NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 12GB GDDR6X GPU features 3,584 CUDA cores with a boost clock frequency of up to 1,780 MHz. Also, the maximum power consumption of the graphics card is 170W. Another inconsistency from the Slovakian retailer is the GDDR6X memory frequencies. Standard GDDR6X offers memory frequencies starting at 19 Gbps to as high as 21 Gbps. Looking at the differences between the initial NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 non-Ti model and the one released from Lenovo, the boost clock is three MHz faster than NVIDIA’s GPU. While it remains to be clarified if the information listed by the retailer is correct, it is possible that Lenovo replaced the original memory with the upgraded GDDR6X standard. Also, the Lenovoshop retailer does not mention pricing, but when researching the card on the Internet, third-party sellers on the website Newegg sell the GPU for $589.18 and $675, while Provantage sells the same card for $546.02. These prices are currently elevated, as the standard NVIDIA-branded RTX 3060 has an estimated MSRP of £369, or $408.56. There is some speculation that the pricing could be a derivative of the recent Ethereum changes that have caused many crypto miners to sell their hardware to make back their ROI or return on investment. News Sources: @momomo_us on Twitter, VideoCardz, Newegg, Newegg, Provantage