- Dec 30, 2004
- 12,553
- 2
- 76
first I've seen this, but then again I haven't been checking every day. How long will this last?
If I had a product selling for 100 dollars and it's almost always oos... Why in God's name would I drop the price... I would raise it.wow, didn't know that site tracks when last OOS...
prices too high though. maybe that's why?
Be careful with TigerDirect, I ordered a Asus Fury X that said it was instock, when I called them they told me it would ship that last week of August. I ended up cancelling my order.
If I had a product selling for 100 dollars and it's almost always oos... Why in God's name would I drop the price... I would raise it.
I don't know what AMD is smoking this generation. One of the best after-market GTX980s that includes a waterblock built-in and a free game is going for $450. Even if one sells the game coupon for just $15, that makes it a $435 videocard vs. $550 for the cheapest Fury.
Even if we make the argument that AMD is selling out every Fury they can make right now, once the wave of early adopters has bought one, these cards will be sitting on the shelves, forcing AMD to drop prices in the next 5-6 months by a lot. That's not going to look good for their image but I bet they'll have no choice as I feel GTX980 will approach $399 with rebates by the holiday season.
I don't know what AMD is smoking this generation. One of the best after-market GTX980s that includes a waterblock built-in and a free game is going for $450. Even if one sells the game coupon for just $15, that makes it a $435 videocard vs. $550 for the cheapest Fury.
Even if we make the argument that AMD is selling out every Fury they can make right now, once the wave of early adopters has bought one, these cards will be sitting on the shelves, forcing AMD to drop prices in the next 5-6 months by a lot. That's not going to look good for their image but I bet they'll have no choice as I feel GTX980 will approach $399 with rebates by the holiday season.
I don't know what AMD is smoking this generation. One of the best after-market GTX980s that includes a waterblock built-in and a free game is going for $450. Even if one sells the game coupon for just $15, that makes it a $435 videocard vs. $550 for the cheapest Fury.
Even if we make the argument that AMD is selling out every Fury they can make right now, once the wave of early adopters has bought one, these cards will be sitting on the shelves, forcing AMD to drop prices in the next 5-6 months by a lot. That's not going to look good for their image but I bet they'll have no choice as I feel GTX980 will approach $399 with rebates by the holiday season.
I don't know what AMD is smoking this generation. One of the best after-market GTX980s that includes a waterblock built-in and a free game is going for $450. Even if one sells the game coupon for just $15, that makes it a $435 videocard vs. $550 for the cheapest Fury.
Even if we make the argument that AMD is selling out every Fury they can make right now, once the wave of early adopters has bought one, these cards will be sitting on the shelves, forcing AMD to drop prices in the next 5-6 months by a lot. That's not going to look good for their image but I bet they'll have no choice as I feel GTX980 will approach $399 with rebates by the holiday season.
They consider the 390x its competitor. it all "makes sense" based on prices and performance. Typically fury is faster than the 980. So why should we expect the same price? The 390x often trades with the 980, so why not look at that instead?
The Fury has no real competitor, that might be the issue. If there were a card from nvidia between the 980 and 980Ti then people would not be trying to match Fury up with the 980. If we expect Fiji to get better with driver support then 980 is nowhere near a Fury in terms of value.
I'd say Fury does have real competition -- factory OC'd 980s. The performance delta between stock Fury and stock 980 is, what? 8%? 10%?
Factory overclocked 980s should do very nicely against Fury.
Maybe. but it would be silly for AMD to be lowering their prices because nvidia is pressured by a better performing card (at stock speeds). Wouldn't help them either when the weaker card is close to a year old and already made money for nvidia. Why chase it?
A 980 at over 1500 MHz trades with a Fury. A plain aftermarket without the manual OC would still lose by a good margin.
There was a thread on it recently.
https://youtu.be/-BTpXQkFJMY
Oc'd 980 vs fury.
There's another one where they push the 980 to almost 1600 Mhz, I'll see if I can find it.
Lol where are you getting that a GTX 980 at over 1500 Mhz trades? We can see the REFERENCE GTX 980 is only 8% or so behind. So no, I don't believe this to be true at all. Factory OCd GTX 980s, as previously stated, would be even with the Fury and that's the issue with the Fury right there.
Look, right now the pricing is great, but I'm saying once AMD actually has REAL stock, then what? No one is going to recommend purchasing the AMD lineup besides AMD fans.
Myself, I went from recommending mostly AMD, to only having the R9 390 as my only AMD recommendation(ignoring the GTX 960 bracket). GTX 980 Ti is too good of a chip and the R9 390x vs GTX 980, price is WAY TOO CLOSE to pick the R9 390x. I see GTX 980s that are $20 more than an R9 390x. OC the GTX 980 and I win there.
GTX 980 Ti vs Fury X? No brainer the GTX 980 Ti Factory OC cards before you OC are going to stomp all over it. For $20-40 over the Fury X, you get a masterpiece card in many instances.
So yes, when many gamers are purchasing based on youtube recommendations and blogs and whatever, AMD needs to get these guys on their side. Probably should be sending review samples out to more of these guys and also trying to make their products more competitive. Because right now, AMD's main problem is that neutral people like myself, who were recommending their products before are NOT now and when you've already dropped marketshare to very low points, you don't want to compound that with people abandoning ship.
AMD's only saving grace, even if poorly played, was the 8GB VRAM. That just allows the card to pick up so many more casual buyers.
I don't know what AMD is smoking this generation. One of the best after-market GTX980s that includes a waterblock built-in and a free game is going for $450. Even if one sells the game coupon for just $15, that makes it a $435 videocard vs. $550 for the cheapest Fury.
Even if we make the argument that AMD is selling out every Fury they can make right now, once the wave of early adopters has bought one, these cards will be sitting on the shelves, forcing AMD to drop prices in the next 5-6 months by a lot. That's not going to look good for their image but I bet they'll have no choice as I feel GTX980 will approach $399 with rebates by the holiday season.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-BTpXQkFJMY
was based on that. Its hard to find that tested. Why would nobody recommend the Fury? It's faster, end of story. If you knew someone who didn't Overclock, you would recommend a 980? I know people like this who would only overclock if things got bad. I myself never ran my 970 beyond stock even though I knew and tested the max OC. For the resolutions most applicable to this lvl of card the fury is a much more solid choice.
980ti is good for now. Its a driver update faster at stock than a fury x. Wasn't denying its faster than a fury x most of the time.
at 1080p some statements are valid. At higher resolutions I am surprised how well the 390x (and 290x as well) does against the 980. Coulda sworn the 980 was destroying everything when it came out. If someone were to have 1080p and want to use VSR or DSR, AMD becomes even more valuable. a 390x costing less than a 980 and doing well against it is ok. I wanted it cheaper as well and was disappointed but we can't always be expecting AMD to sell for less when they have good cards. 390x vs 980 the pricing is perfect even if we don't like it (perfect relatively). It's in a perfect pricing position actually, no direct cost competitor and performance fits. What else would you buy for over $340 but consistently under $450? with 8GB of ram embarrassing both the 970 and 980.
I think if a neutral view is taken you would not really be saying AMD is in so bad a position. Their pricing fits stock clock performance and overclocks can reduce the impact of maxwell overclocks. The sentiment seems more like "how dare you price like you're selling good product?"
99.9% of people don't have liquid cooling solution, so the double cooling option is WORTHLESS. Even if they had, they wouldn't be using a GTX 580 for it, they'd be using GTX 580TI or Titan X.
The card goes for $479 without rebate, the game is nice, but its a niche game, having only been available on PS system mostly, so hardly a PC staple.
The Fury is also in general several percentage points faster than the GTX 580, cooler, has HBM memory.
Ya sure... a "Neutral view". Because I'm not a neutral owner with an HD7950 right now rihgt? Surely I must be an Nvidia fanboy for saying the Nvidia option is better. You talk about VSR. Ok great. GTX 980 can do 4K DSR, or whatever DSR it wants. 390x has 1800p VSR and can't go higher. Yes, this is something I've thought about a lot as a person who wanted 4K VSR you get more features out of the GTX 980. Both are the same performance, but the GTX 980 has HDMI 2.0, DSR that goes higher than 1800p, etc. The 390x is in a VERY poor position vs the GTX 980.
R9 390 vs GTX 970? That's a much better fight.
99.9% of people don't have liquid cooling solution, so the double cooling option is WORTHLESS. Even if they had, they wouldn't be using a GTX 580 for it, they'd be using GTX 580TI or Titan X.
The card goes for $479 without rebate, the game is nice, but its a niche game, having only been available on PS system mostly, so hardly a PC staple.
The Fury is also in general several percentage points faster than the GTX 580, cooler, has HBM memory.