I just looked, and I don't see any 4080's available from Amazon for $1199. I'll iterate that they sold out at launch, and again, if they were struggling to move inventory, there wouldn't be this market reality where things were "drying up".I haven’t seen many 4080 founders additions, but I e seen plenty of the partner cards going for their msrps. They’re just now drying up, but a quick look at Amazon and two of the partner cards are up for their normal prices. I believe it that they e had more trouble moving those due to the relatively bad value
There were shitloads of the RX 6000 series cards in Australia when you couldn't kill someone to get one here in the States.There's shitloads of stock of 4080s and 4090s here in Australia (or at least, in my corner) and they've been in stock since launch. The price is still eyewateringly expensive.
Only the founders cards are 1200. That's why i said partner cards. I was watching at launch and there was a bunch of partner cards on sale at their msrp up until this week-ish.4080's available from Amazon for $1199.
You said you had seen plenty of the partner cards going for MSRP. There is none. There is no officially disclosed MSRP for AIB cards that sell above the reference MSRP. You can refer to the manufacturer website for a de facto official pricing of their various variants, as a baseline, when they sell them directly themselves, but those prices aren't set, and may change depending on the market. For example, in fact, the best-priced Zotac Trinity on Amazon does quote for a matching $1199 to the reference, from Zotac themselves, but they're out of stock, and obviously Amazon's best current price from any vendor doesn't match it.Only the founders cards are 1200. That's why i said partner cards. I was watching at launch and there was a bunch of partner cards on sale at their msrp up until this week-ish.
When i posted earlier there was one for 1300 which is probably the msrp for that card, and one for 1400 which is probably slightly inflated. So they are out there.
I literally just watched the 7900 xt to review from Gamer's Nexus where he went into a store and showed a bunch of 4080s on the shelves for sale. i guess that was staged for clicksYou said you had seen plenty of the partner cards going for MSRP. There is none. There is no officially disclosed MSRP for AIB cards that sell above the reference MSRP. You can refer to the manufacturer website for a de facto official pricing of their various variants, as a baseline, when they sell them directly themselves, but those prices aren't set, and may change depending on the market. For example, in fact, the best-priced Zotac Trinity on Amazon does quote for a matching $1199 to the reference, from Zotac themselves, but they're out of stock, and obviously Amazon's best current price from any vendor doesn't match it.
https://www.zotacstore.com/us/zotac-gaming-geforce-rtx-4080-16gb-trinity
I don't understand what this has to do with the nonexistence of MSRP for AIBs, or the readily accessible pricing of the 4080 as it exists presently (or immediately after launch) online at major retailers, the two topics were just discussing. I suspect one could find 4080's at MSRP on the shelf of a Microcenter somewhere. The 4000 series cards are currently among the bestsellers on Amazon. If they weren't selling, they wouldn't be up there.I literally just watched the 7900 xt to review from Gamer's Nexus where he went into a store and showed a bunch of 4080s on the shelves for sale. i guess that was staged for clicks
You do understand. It all adds up to you being wrong. You do know that you can find the retail prices for a lot of those cards by looking up the press releases. You do know from the EVGA story that board partners were going to have to be selling over the founders card prices. The real question is why I are you persisting after you’ve realized you were wrong?Which is above MSRP. I rest my case.
I don't understand what this has to do with the nonexistence of MSRP for AIBs, or the readily accessible pricing of the 4080 as it exists presently (or immediately after launch) online at major retailers, the two topics were just discussing. I suspect one could find 4080's at MSRP on the shelf of a Microcenter somewhere. The 4000 series cards are currently among the bestsellers on Amazon. If they weren't selling, they wouldn't be up there.
You gotta find something more concrete to compare to past generations if you want to convince me NVIDIA has inventory problems.
It was just demonstrated that you were wrong about AIB variants also retailing for $1199, not just the reference design (a Zotac variant was provided as an example)-- after you made this claim. It was established that none of the AIBs (or reference) are selling for the MSRP on Amazon, currently. Price trackers show that the 4080 reference was never sold for $1199 on Amazon (it's been above $1500 since launch).You do understand. It all adds up to you being wrong. You do know that you can find the retail prices for a lot of those cards by looking up the press releases. You do know from the EVGA story that board partners were going to have to be selling over the founders card prices. The real question is why I are you persisting after you’ve realized you were wrong?
Yes, that's the nature of the clickbait industry. It's widely distributed, regurgitated spam for profit. It is up to the reader to critically assess what is true, and what isn't.I’m not going to go hunting for prices of each of the many 1300 boards. I know that they are close enough that they are very likely not being scalped. You can claim victory all you want but it’s blatantly obvious you were wrong and these were made up click bait stories that showed up on like every venerated pc hardware site.
I actually kind of stopped reading midway down. I get the tactic. Keep writing a ton and see if you can’t pull the wool over our eyes. I can’t believe you’re actually going to sit here and pretend that partner cards at $100 premium is a scalper flip.. like that’s an unusual premium on those cards.It was just demonstrated that you were wrong about AIB variants also retailing for $1199, not just the reference design (a Zotac variant was provided as an example)-- after you made this claim. It was established that none of the AIBs (or reference) are selling for the MSRP on Amazon, currently. Price trackers show that the 4080 reference was never sold for $1199 on Amazon (it's been above $1500 since launch).
I never claimed there isn't a single AIB card matching its manufacturer quoted price above MSRP, but you didn't share with me an AIB matching its press release quote (or manufacturer website price).
Yes, that's the nature of the clickbait industry. It's widely distributed, regurgitated spam for profit. It is up to the reader to critically assess what is true, and what isn't.
You don't seem to be reading, at all.I actually kind of stopped reading midway down. I get the tactic. Keep writing a ton and see if you can’t pull the wool over our eyes. I can’t believe you’re actually going to sit here and pretend that partner cards at $100 premium is a scalper flip.. like that’s an unusual premium on those cards.
Scalpers might be assholes, but at worst, they're selling to break even, there isn't this excrutiating inability to sell.
Concession acceptedYou don't seem to be reading, at all.
I’m not even sure what I would buy today. I guess the xtx if I decided to forgo DLSS and raytracing, which is probably the best move given the insane prices. The other option really is to wait on the 4090 to drop down to msrp. It’s so much better than the 4080 and the 4080s price is so damn high you might as well go all out.You guys should wait a bit to buy a 4080. I think Nvidia is going to drop the price in the near future
I’m not even sure what I would buy today.
Newegg didn't change its return policy. You're confusing their store-wide return policy with the refund policy specifically on the 4080. They never declared it was because of scalpers attempting to return cards, but most would accept they weren't interested in enabling scalpers to so easily recoup their cost, and were forcing the burden on them to move the card again on the open market even if for no profit at all. What I've said is that 4080's are selling well, so scalpers won't have issues selling them even if they cannot scalp them for a windfall profit. The 4080 is selling well. That's why it's on bestseller charts, and they are selling above the MSRP for the 4080 still two months after launch.Let’s also ignore that story about Newegg changing its return policy because of scalpers trying to get their money back on inventory they can’t get rid of. Click bait!
Concession for what? An assertion you invented because you were too agitated to read what I wrote in a prior post?Concession accepted
If you’re confused about what’s being contended, it’s because you wrote a bunch of shit to not sound wrongNewegg didn't change its return policy. You're confusing their store-wide return policy with the refund policy specifically on the 4080. They never declared it was because of scalpers attempting to return cards, but most would accept they weren't interested in enabling scalpers to so easily recoup their cost, and were forcing the burden on them to move the card again on the open market even if for no profit at all. What I've said is that 4080's are selling well, so scalpers won't have issues selling them even if they cannot scalp them for a windfall profit. The 4080 is selling well. That's why it's on bestseller charts, and they are selling above the MSRP for the 4080 still two months after launch.
Just look at the 4080 I first highlighted in post #5097, the only one on PCPP's list that was selling for the $1199 MSRP at the time I composed that post, via Newegg. Now it's sold out. Look at almost every card listed on PCPP. Most resellers are sold out of nearly every 4080 variant out there.
Concession for what? An assertion you invented because you were too agitated to read what I wrote in a prior post?
Look over the things I've pointed out. @Unknown Pleasures expressed frustration that he couldn't find the 7900 XTX right away. I pointed out that it's normal for GPUs to be difficult to find immediately after launch. This was true even before the cryptobubble with unrestrained scalping, and before the pandemic's supply constraints. I then pointed out that the 4080 is selling just finely, and almost every version of it available is selling above MSRP. Remember I'm the guy who has been slamming NVIDIA. It's not like I want things to be rosy for them.
You conflated this with AIB premiums. So I pointed out that AIBs don't have an MSRP. Partners also stopped issuing "official" prices for these cards in press releases with the previous generation. The closest thing to an official price for any of them is when the partner themselves sells the variant on their own store (ex. EVGA, ASUS), but these prices were always subject to fluctuation. If you want to demonstrate a rapid decline for the pricing of a particular AIB since launch, document this for us. There are price trackers that could show this.
At this point, I'm unclear what is being contended. If it is that there is zero demand for the 4080, that is wrong. This is apparent for all the reasons I've cited. If it is that only NVIDIA is adequately manufacturing cards to meet demand, that is also wrong. I just listed four different 7900 XT's at the reference MSRP available from AMD directly and from Newegg at the time of my posting it. This is their less popular card just like the 4080 is NVIDIA's less popular card. AMD is also not 2 months out from launch where they've already met the initial demand wave of the niche market of buyers who are interested in such expensive cards.
Like claiming AIBs i.e. "partner cards" have MSRPs? Like claiming "only the founder's cards" are $1199?If you’re confused about what’s being contended, it’s because you wrote a bunch of shit to not sound wrong
The RTX 2080 Super's MSRP was $699. A +$90 premium.Priced at $790, it is one of the more expensive 2080 Super cards and isn't substantially faster than other models, but it packs in a lot of extras.