It's just an off time to buy in general. We haven't really increased per core performance enough to matter since skylake's release, just added more cores. Turing has been out over a year now. We have new consoles coming out next year. I'm just holding on until this passes. What I would do though is get a nice monitor, then start looking at the other parts of my system that are external. I've got more mileage or satisfaction out of upgrading my monitor/keyboard/mouse/HEADPHONES/speakers/CHAIR/etc over the last 5+ years (probably closer to 10) than I have from upgrading internal parts. I could use a nice 2tb+ ssd though.
Right on. Good point. I also want a 1TB SSD that would be great, have a 500GB Currently. Going to mess around with my GTX 1080ti when it arrives here on Monday back from EVGA. See what kind of performance I get and how it does with games. I did run Firestrike and Heaven and it scored significantly higher than my RTX 2060 at around 30FPS More at 1080p. So that's pretty sweet.
As stated by others on this thread, there is no point on upgrading to an RTX 2080ti for 1080p gaming, there is virtually no major gain to justify the upgrade. But I am considering building a new system and keeping the 1080ti. Its not honestly so much about gaining major performance in return but I would really enjoy the whole experience of building another computer. Its fun, and its something I enjoy just to mix things up a little. It would be neat to start fresh with everything hehe.
This time I would do 3200Mhz RAM and 1TB SSD with an i7 8700K. Keeping the GTX 1080ti of course.