- Mar 18, 2007
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I'm really hoping that the bubble will burst open next year so GPU prices will return to sane levels.Crypto bubble is driving it, total altcoins network hashrate across the board is up and a lot of that has got to be GPUs
Really do not see the value of virtual money. Even bitcoin which is one of the oldest and most famous is garbage, you can't buy anything with it, though as a share price its quite high value.
But again you can barely use it anywhere, apart from some dark net websites, some vpn's Valve used bitcoin, etc... there is little use for it.
I don't know how useful that comparison is as a general statement on "video card prices" overall. Comparing the price of one card, two weeks apart? Is the price you're talking about a new "regular" price? Is it the same seller? Not to mention that two weeks ago was squarely within the biggest "holiday shopping" period of the year in much of the "developed" world...Same video card I bought a few weeks ago is now $30+ more direct from a retailer.
I don't know how useful that comparison is as a general statement on "video card prices" overall. Comparing the price of one card, two weeks apart? Is the price you're talking about a new "regular" price? Is it the same seller? Not to mention that two weeks ago was squarely within the biggest "holiday shopping" period of the year in much of the "developed" world...
I just, like an hour ago, purchased a MSI RX 580 8 GB ($319.99). I couldn't afford, nor wait, on an AIB Vega. I HAD to have one, as my R9 290 doesn't have freesync, and my new monitor has <1ms and 144Hz with freesync. Right now, it's making me nauseous @ 60 hz.
Is it really a mark up though, as in an increase of "list price" (or even "regular selling price" for those things that rarely sell at MSRP), or is it simply "no longer on sale"?For another example, I purchase an XFX RX 580 at BestBuy on 12/15 for $299.99 and today, the exact same card at BestBuy is now $429.99. That is a substantial mark up.
It was one of the reasons I quit pc gaming. Last card I bought was in June 2016. Sold it because I wanted an upgrade and in the process prices went nuts. I never bought another one. I refused to pay the absurd prices. If I ever game again it will be a Nintendo switch or maybe a regular ps4 or Xbox slim.
Who are any of you or I to judge how people use the cards they have purchased? Don’t get mad at crypto, be upset with the manufacturers for not meeting demand. Just look at DDR4 and NAND shortages, you think crypto is causing that too?
No, there is a bigger issue at play here and has been for a while now.
I try not to enter tinfoil hat territory, however I can’t help but think that this is a play at setting the price floor higher for better profit margin.
What 3rd party do those charts track? Looks like scalper pricing to me, 3rd party pricing is never very reliable. I haven’t had an issue getting GPUs at or close to MSRP simply by waiting for them to come in stock and picking them up from Newegg directly (not 3rd party).
I have never denied that miners play a role, just that their role in pricing and shortages are not as big as people claim.
The most likely culprit is the inability of fabs to keep up with demand for DRAM and NAND. Everyone from console makers to big-box PC brands are experiencing shortages, it’s not just GPUs. It is widely accepted that smartphones are the larger culprit for these shortages, and when you have big players like Apple chewing up supply and fab time other markets suffer.