Monday, August 20th 2018

NVIDIA GeForce RTX Pricing Founders Edition Revealed

Redditors noticed NVIDIA published its GeForce RTX product page ahead of product launch. The page reveals MSRP prices for the first three Founders Edition products in the series, the RTX 2080, the RTX 2080 Ti, and the RTX 2070. The RTX 2080 is priced at USD $799.99, followed by the RTX 2080 Ti at $1,299 and the RTX 2070 at $599. All three new graphics cards will begin shipping on the 20th of September, 2018.
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53 Comments on NVIDIA GeForce RTX Pricing Founders Edition Revealed

#26
iO
Somehow gotta make another billion profit next quarter even with those huge dies...
Posted on Reply
#27
carex
Durvelle27RTX 2070 faster than a GTX Titan V

I’m definitely going to get one
ONLY IN RAY TRACING MAN
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#30
Divide Overflow
xkm1948FAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAKE NEWS!
$999 for 2080 Ti ordering one now
Link your pre-order sales page for a 2080 Ti at $999.
Posted on Reply
#31
Vayra86
medi01Oh, boy, I'm so enjoying it.


Yeah, only 50$ over Fools Edition of 1070, while 2080 is 100$ over 1080FE, and 2080Ti si.... lolololol...
For once, I'm with you mate.

This is hilarious. Watch those reviews and the real world performance when they're up and this joke gets even better.

Here's what we REALLY have:

1080ti performance at nearly the same price point as an architecture that was out for over 2 years.
Posted on Reply
#32
R0H1T
carexONLY IN RAY TRACING MAN
I thought this was pretty evident? FFS people, don't fall for the marketing slides!
Wait for reviews, on this site or elsewhere, and make you sure you read the footnotes.
Posted on Reply
#33
Prince Valiant
Vayra86For once, I'm with you mate.

This is hilarious. Watch those reviews and the real world performance when they're up and this joke gets even better.

Here's what we REALLY have:

1080ti performance at nearly the same price point as an architecture that was out for over 2 years.
It'd be pathetic but, it's looking like that may end up being the case :laugh:.
Posted on Reply
#34
Vayra86
Prince ValiantIt'd be pathetic but, it's looking like that may end up being the case :laugh:.
Called it... AdoredTV can go eat his shoe
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#35
cucker tarlson
Don't get me wrong, I think this is a great leap in terms of visual quality in games, but the selection of titles this is gonna be available in will be so scarce that this price is just too much unless you've got money to blow. I like those cards, I like them a lot in terms of what features they offer, but I'm not gonna be an early adopter of RTX. Patience, people, patience.
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#36
Dave65
No and NO, I will stick to my 1080ti,.
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#37
Tomorrow
These are pre order prices. MSRP prices announced on stage were lower:

2080Ti: 1050€
2080: 750€
2070: 550€
Posted on Reply
#38
medi01
Durvelle27RTX 2070 faster than a GTX Titan V

I’m definitely going to get one
How FUD works 101.
Posted on Reply
#39
Sandbo
That’s what it looks like when competitors are all dead. I hope AMD could do something, like they are doing on the CPU side.
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#40
medi01
SandboI hope AMD could do something
I hope AMD goes full semi-custom and laughs.
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#41
cucker tarlson
1.Wait for the goddamn reviews before you buy,will you ?
2.Wait for the technology to catch on, cause I'm sure it will, did you see what it looks like, it's friggin spectacular. Only problem - it's in 3 games so far, will take another year or more to really see an acceptable number of games utilizing RTX, will take two or more to really see it as widely implemented as regular gameworks is. Can't wait to see it in action...on my 7nm nvidia card for the first time.
3.Those lower prices were not for FE perorder, they were for cheapest AIB cards from 20th Sept
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#42
Fx
Holy shit! This is far worse than I speculated. I was thinking more along the lines of $1,000. Even then, I was wondering if I would actually reach for the wallet.

Sitting on a 980 Ti now, it looks like I'll be playing the wait game for much longer.
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#43
Easo
Well, thanks, but no thanks.
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#44
Vya Domus
Razrback16I blame AMD here - get competitive guys!
What's wonderful is that you don't have to wait for that, you can simply chose to not buy extremely overpriced products. You can have all the competition in the world, if people still give in to these insane prices it will amount to nothing and it's not like this didn't happen before.

Stop kidding yourselves, the market sorts itself out when it comes down to prices through how much customers are willing to pay.
Posted on Reply
#45
Unregistered
Vya DomusWhat's wonderful is that you don't have to wait for that, you can simply chose to not buy extremely overpriced products. You can have all the competition in the world, if people still give in to these insane prices it will amount to nothing and it's not like this didn't happen before.
Oh don't worry, I have no intention of buying at that price point. $1200 per card, and with a $hitty air cooler to boot. LOL. Money's not even an issue for me, but that's just an asinine price point by NVidia. They can sell that $hit to somebody else at that price.

At that price point it should come with the hottest escort imaginable that I get for a whole weekend.
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#46
Parn
Wish AMD could get competitive again and shake up the graphics market just like they did for the CPUs.

With those prices NV can keep the entire 20 series to themselves. I'm happy with my 1080.
Posted on Reply
#47
Prima.Vera
Vayra86Yup. NEXT

Nvidia may be up for a nasty surprise this round if they keep this up. This is a chance for competition to gain advantage.
What competition? AMD doesn't even have a card to succesfully compete with a 2 years old 1080 card, not to mention those top dogs. nGreedia just pulled another Apple/Intel...
Oh well, I guess I will live long and prosper with my 1080....
Posted on Reply
#48
Fluffmeister
ParnWish AMD could get competitive again and shake up the graphics market just like they did for the CPUs.

With those prices NV can keep the entire 20 series to themselves. I'm happy with my 1080.
Prima.VeraWhat competition? AMD doesn't even have a card to succesfully compete with a 2 years old 1080 card, not to mention those top dogs. nGreedia just pulled another Apple/Intel...
Oh well, I guess I will live long and prosper with my 1080....
lexluthermiesterUntil reviews and benchmarks hit we will not know that full current potential of this new gen of cards. Even then the ray-tracing aspects will not reach full potential until dev tools have matured and devs have had time to get to know and understand them, which is years off. So unless this new gen can offer great strides in performance for current and past games, I'm sticking with my 1080.
I'm seeing a pattern here, although it might not be teaching Nvidia a lesson.
Posted on Reply
#49
R0H1T
Vya DomusWhat's wonderful is that you don't have to wait for that, you can simply chose to not buy extremely overpriced products. You can have all the competition in the world, if people still give in to these insane prices it will amount to nothing and it's not like this didn't happen before.

Stop kidding yourselves, the market sorts itself out when it comes down to prices through how much customers are willing to pay.
Well it's not like we had deca cores at $1700 from you know who, yet some people will still not buy AMD today. They're just a placeholder so that the competition gives them cheap(er) products.
Posted on Reply
#50
HZCH
... I'm thinking of something: maybe NVidia decided those insane prices because Turing is the best mining chip ever made yet?
HZCH... I'm thinking of something: maybe NVidia decided those insane prices because Turing is the best mining chip ever made yet?
No but seriously, some might say NVidia will always find someone paying 1100$ for a GPU but I have the intuition Turing prices are totally missing their target...
Posted on Reply
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