Microcenter here has almost 150 5090s in stock (and they've had stock for awhile now) yet the cheapest one is still $600 above MSRP.
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What about this isn't sinking in?
Nobody said anything about "acceptable business practice". It's a market reality. And as @My Spot just highlighted, it isn't entirely clear to us what portion of GPU pricing's inflation is enjoyed by the retailers. Sure looks like they've got their hand in the cookie jar, too.Im not the one persistently running defense here for these "MSRP ratios" from one or all companies as a acceptable business practice since 2020.
Wont act emphatetic or giddy for AMD when they fix their performance months after launch, again. To beat the product it was designed to compete against that is equally overpriced.
I do my best to avoid any political traps when discussing electronics, but I was pretty terrified of the prices we were led to believe the tariffs would impose. Not only has the stock market defied all the predictions of those "expert" economists, yet again, it looks like the same is also true for the PC building market.7800X3D and 9800X3D are $300 and $400 through the 11th at MC and I think Best Buy will price match for anyone wondering.
It's a good time to build right now but that's mostly due to tariffs being paused (both the latest batch and Sec 501 got delayed) and inventory stockpiling. The IDC numbers for Q2 are a huge warning sign and pretty bad. You can only keep kicking the tariff can down the road so many times before you rack up higher costs for complying and adapting.I do my best to avoid any political traps when discussing electronics, but I was pretty terrified of the prices we were led to believe the tariffs would impose. Not only has the stock market defied all the predictions of those "expert" economists, yet again, it looks like the same is also true for the PC building market.
It's actually as swell a time to build a PC as it has ever been.
I can’t believe they managed to sell the fucking things to begin with. For a while they were double MSRP. Prices have gotten so bad because gamers have gotten retarded about what they’ll payMicrocenter here has almost 150 5090s in stock (and they've had stock for awhile now) yet the cheapest one is still $600 above MSRP.
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I do my best to avoid any political traps when discussing electronics, but I was pretty terrified of the prices we were led to believe the tariffs would impose. Not only has the stock market defied all the predictions of those "expert" economists, yet again, it looks like the same is also true for the PC building market.
It's a good time to build right now but that's mostly due to tariffs being paused (both the latest batch and Sec 501 got delayed) and inventory stockpiling. The IDC numbers for Q2 are a huge warning sign and pretty bad. You can only keep kicking the tariff can down the road so many times before you rack up higher costs for complying and adapting.
Ever since marks went full retard during Covid when the 3000 series came out.I can’t believe they managed to sell the fucking things to begin with. For a while they were double MSRP. Prices have gotten so bad because gamers have gotten retarded about what they’ll pay
Ever since marks went full retard during Covid when the 3000 series came out.
I don't know why people keep saying RTX 20 flopped. Sell out was fine, 2060 beat 1660 and feel behind against anything higher on GTX. High end volume was pretty encouraging too for what RTX was: the last huge marketing win and shift for the PC space.That was caused by four factors colliding. 2000 series basically flopping, scalper/crypto miner interest and initial then second quarantine increasing demand.
Nvidia and AMD are funneling all the capacity they currently have, and high end GPU margins are better. IDK where you're getting this idea that Nvidia and AMD would prefer customers by entry-level products instead of premium. Gaming hasn't mattered for Nvidia in years, it's a mature market, datacenter isn't.Today the reasoning is more nefarious. Nvidia/AMD intentionally keeping consumer high end GPU product stock low to push entry level products. This allows them to leverage prices higher beyond whats acceptable. An what we've learned over the past week with Nvidia is that their Pc gamer GPU sales no longer matter.
I don't know why people keep saying RTX 20 flopped.
RTX 20's best year was 2020 by a substantial amount, which tracked with previous cycles aside from higher than normal seasonality midyear (covid) and the super refresh (it takes a while to get stock into the channel for prebuilds).Margins are better at the higher end. But like we've both stated, Nvidias business is no longer in gaming. An when a new series is about to launch Nvidia intentionally reduces then stops current series mid to high end production. To emphasize previous series low end cards as the new entry.
You're giving Nvidia a little too much credit here. There's no point producing two generations of cards at once. It was more incompetence than malice, they screwed up on Blackwell datacenter and had to pull out all the stops and strip resources from gaming to get it back on track. Nvidia was about a quarter and a half behind on RTX 50 when it finally came outt.Margins are better at the higher end. But like we've both stated, Nvidias business is no longer in gaming. An when a new series is about to launch Nvidia intentionally reduces then stops current series mid to high end production. To emphasize previous series low end cards as the new entry.
This is their first real big miss on bridging generations. RTX 30 had a ridiculous amount of stock and RTX 40 didn't really hit huge volumes for sell out until H2 2024. You don't seem to understand how much excess RTX 30 was floating around during RTX 40's life cycle.When the 5080 launched its great for hardware reviewers to use the 4080 as a comparison. When as a consumer the 4080 is a unavailable product. Ones available for purchase were 4060's and 4050's. Nvidia has done this twice now with their 4000 and 5000 series launch. Something theyll mimic again come 6000 launch.
Again, having a supply shortage between generations doesn't make you extra money. The goal is to get as close as possible to having stock on shelf at all times and the transition being as fast as possible.
I don't know why you are so strongly confident in your views despite not basing them remotely on anything concrete.