Wednesday, May 22nd 2013
GeForce GTX 780 Pricing Revealed
Ahead of its launch just a little later this week, online retailers appear to be stocking up on NVIDIA's upcoming GeForce GTX 780 graphics card. An EVGA-branded card is being offered by distributor SYNNEX to retailers at US $644.44. This is the price that retailers (eg: Newegg, TigerDirect, NCIX, etc.) have to pay distributors per unit. We estimate that after retailers add their margins, the card could be priced anywhere between $650-700. Thankfully, we won't have to wait too long to find out.
The screenshot of the SKU page below also confirms key specifications, such as CUDA core count of 2,304, 3 GB of memory, GPU Boost 2.0 technology, and a design that's nearly identical to the GTX TITAN. The SKU page can't be linked to, since it's non-public, and is visible only on retailers' authentication.
The screenshot of the SKU page below also confirms key specifications, such as CUDA core count of 2,304, 3 GB of memory, GPU Boost 2.0 technology, and a design that's nearly identical to the GTX TITAN. The SKU page can't be linked to, since it's non-public, and is visible only on retailers' authentication.
77 Comments on GeForce GTX 780 Pricing Revealed
780 $470
770 $400
760 ti $340
760 $280
750 ti $210
750 $160
They have had plenty enough as it is.
This makes what AMD did with the 7970 @ $550 launch look downright amazing.
At these prices its all getting a bot silly imho
The 680 sells for around 400 uk notes the 770 can't reasonably be sold for that much more but its nv so it will be five hundred quids worth which is too high for a bios and sticker.
IT would leave a two and a half hundred pound gap between the 770-780 which to me is too big for the performance you will get.
here it says 647$
Could it be 599$ MSRP?
1. I am willing and able to pay the price for that 1% performance increase, or
2. I am either not willing or not able (or both) to pay the price for that 1%.
As long as you are in camp 2, you can disregard this product and continue enjoy decently priced stuff from 7850/650Ti to 7970/680. For people in camp 1 either they need that extra performance, or they deserve to be parted from their money.
What is this sh.t?
What would be most interesting is to see is the performance of an overclocked 7970 with good cooling versus an overclocked 780. That's where the price argument should be.
If the card cools well and runs quieter with good efficiency well... these are all things that ATI was praised for when it was competing against Fermi (GF100). It's hypocritical to dismiss the past. Kepler has been been quiet and efficient while still kicking out very good performance.
AMD has delivered a faster card with a few creases. If the 780 is marginally faster than a 7970 GHz, then we could call it a failure. If it beats it enough across the board and then runs quieter and more efficiently, Nvidia can price it any way they want.
People who incessantly bitch and moan about pricing should stop being so ideological. Some folk have PC cases that cost 5 times as much as a standard alternative. Some people buy the Intel extreme cpu's. Others buy crazy ass motherboards that they never fully utilise. Enthusiast products get to be as expensive as the price people will pay.
AMD screwed up with their initial pricing of the 7970 big time. When I first bought my Powercolor LCS HD7970 it was retailed at £600 ($900). I bought it at £520 before the GTX 680 was released. AMD dropped their pricing pretty fast after that.
Nvidia are just jumping in before AMD release their next cards. They can price high and sail on it until the competition comes out. I wouldn't be surprised to see Nvidia drop prices when the proper HD89xx series comes out.
If the rumors prove true and we get a GTX 780 around the $650 mark that's maybe 25% faster than the 7970GE, you are getting 25% more performance for 45% more money - a bad value relatively speaking.
I don't understand why enthusiasts are so willing to allow Nvidia (and I'm sure AMD will just follow suite here if they can) to jack up the expected prices on a flagship card. All of a sudden we've gone from a situation where new generation flagship cards were expected in the $450-600 range to where they're expected (apparently) in the $650-1000 range, and I just think that's ridiculous. Nvidia is screwing everyone and the whining is justified IMO.
The times that flagship video cards are ~$200 are long gone, yet people still continue to complain about it. The fact that the Titan has out sold the GTX690 in only 3 months says differently. And Nvidia is laughing all the way to the bank.
Right now there are so many SKUs at every price point and performance that I'm sure anybody who wants to buy a card will find something within his budget. Furthermore, for example a GTX 650 Ti Boost or the AMD equivalent which go for around 150$ will play every game out there.
So, a GTX780 was never meant to be for everybody. Same as the HD7970 when it was launched at $550.
holy schnikes ...
nvidia is crazy with pricing.
Everyone knows that high end single GPU cards offer a decreased value from lower range cards in their same family (e.g. a 670 is a better value than a 680, 660ti SLI is a lot faster than a 680 for similar money, etc).
But what's raising my eyebrows about this whole thing is that we are all of a sudden seeing a new generation launch that offers WORSE value than the generation it replaces. In my mind, that's a very concerning trend, and in that respect this isn't like the 7970 launch at all.
a 780 would be about £550 +
hmm price of two 7970s..... or three 7950s at a push!
Actually that's just a trend in computing in general lately haha.