Friday, August 24th 2018

PNY Reveals Their RTX 20-Series Lineup of Partner Graphics Cards

PNY has taken the lid of their RTX graphics card lineup, revealing a total of 9 (at least, for now) models that will be sold under the new graphics card lineup. For now, PNY's store only offers purchase options for the RTX 2080 Ti and RTX 2080 graphics cards, with the RTX 2070 only featuring product pages, but no pricing information.

PNY's product differentiation stands, as always, with factory overclocking and the cooling solution employed. There are two RTX 2080 Ti graphics cards - the RTX 2080 Ti 11GB Blower, which caters to the audiences that NVIDIA has left behind with their in-house designs (which now all feature a dual-fan cooling system), and the RTX 2080 Ti 11GB XLR8 Gaming Overclocked Edition ($1,299) with a triple-fan, LED-infused design. For now, there's no information on finalized clock speeds, and both cards feature NVIDIA's reference 1525 MHz core clocks on their specs listing.
The RTX 2080 features a confusing, four-card lineup, where the blower option goes for $859; a dual-fan solution sans RGB will go for $10 more, at $869, which is also the pricing of another dual-fan solution which features RGB elements. Oh, and to top it all off, there's a triple-fan 2080 in the form of the PNY GeForce RTX 2080 8GB XLR8 Gaming Overclocked Edition Triple Fan... At the same $869.
The RTX 2070, when it becomes available for pre-order (which should be available around the same time as the other solutions), will be available in just three models.
Source: PNY
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24 Comments on PNY Reveals Their RTX 20-Series Lineup of Partner Graphics Cards

#1
TheOne
Look at those blower styled cards $860 & $1250, just like with Pascal I doubt any cards will retail for MSRP.
Posted on Reply
#2
windwhirl
I'll never understand why they need to release four variants of the same card for the same market. Two I could get, a quiet one with rather average clocks and another one that is factory overclocked to the limits and ready to blast through anything you throw at it. But four? I just don't get it...
Posted on Reply
#3
Fleurious
Looks nice enough, but since my PNY 780 Ti died I’ll just be avoiding the brand for a while.
Posted on Reply
#4
Lightning
Let's waste materials, yay ! :kookoo:

Think it has more to do with options, from their PoV. They're giving us more options.
Posted on Reply
#5
diatribe
I can't believe this is what the Nvidia market has become. Sad days.
Posted on Reply
#6
theonek
and let's begin with enormous prices..... At that price it should a single card to work like two of the current top class, otherwise the price is not real at all....
Posted on Reply
#7
Vya Domus
Yep, "starting from" was a load of shit. Not that I didn't already know.
Posted on Reply
#8
TheinsanegamerN
I love how everyone is getting twisted out of shape ont he price. the launch price is super high?!? OMG its like every flagship GPU since the 680!!!!!

lolcalmdown. Prices will fall, it might take longer since AMD is asleep at the wheel, but I doubt the 2080ti will stay above $1000 for long. And its not like the 1080 dissappeared, and unless you are pushing 1440p144 or higher, you really wont need the power of these cards for some time.
FleuriousLooks nice enough, but since my PNY 780 Ti died I’ll just be avoiding the brand for a while.
The 780ti is a big, powerful card, the bigger the GPU the more prone they are to manufacturing defect.
Posted on Reply
#9
Vayra86
My god these things are huge.

I think we're looking at HOT cards.
Posted on Reply
#10
Th3pwn3r
TheinsanegamerNPrices will fall, it might take longer since AMD is asleep at the wheel, but I doubt the 2080ti will stay above $1000 for long.
For what reason would prices fall? The current generation of cards increased in price by a large margin. Unless supply is very high prices will either stay the same or even increase. Maybe these cards will collect dust on shelves and that'll cause price drops.
Posted on Reply
#11
phanbuey
Th3pwn3rFor what reason would prices fall? The current generation of cards increased in price by a large margin. Unless supply is very high prices will either stay the same or even increase. Maybe these cards will collect dust on shelves and that'll cause price drops.
Mainly due to the fact that there is oversupply of older gen 1x cards due to the crypto dry up, and the fact that these prices are insanely high. So few games support ray tracing that a used 1080 might be the price/perf sweet spot for most ppl.

Maybe the 2080ti wont fall, but the 2080 and 2070 likely will,
Posted on Reply
#12
TheOne
I wouldn't expect any discounts for at least 6 months, probably longer unless demand is low, and even then I don't think you will see any at or below MSRP.
Posted on Reply
#13
CheapMeat
Interesting how the Ti's don't get RGB.
Posted on Reply
#14
Th3pwn3r
phanbueyMainly due to the fact that there is oversupply of older gen 1x cards due to the crypto dry up, and the fact that these prices are insanely high. So few games support ray tracing that a used 1080 might be the price/perf sweet spot for most ppl.

Maybe the 2080ti wont fall, but the 2080 and 2070 likely will,
That oversupply still has cards at over $700 on very old cards. There's no reason for Nvidia to drop prices at all. Sure it would be nice but they can keep charging what they have been. Personally I'm not buying into Nvidia's ray tracing hype .
TheOneI wouldn't expect any discounts for at least 6 months, probably longer unless demand is low, and even then I don't think you will see any at or below MSRP.
If demand is high with the newer generation they can increase prices on the new gen and current if they want to. Crappy yes but possible.
CheapMeatInteresting how the Ti's don't get RGB.
It'll be an upgrade. RTX 2080tiRGB $2,000 for for one with a blower cooler , $2,500 for one with custom cooler. Water cooled will be RTX2080tiRGBH2O for $3,000.
Posted on Reply
#15
Fatalfury
when there were leaks from PNY before the release of the RTX 2080 ti...everybody thought the $1000 was just a placeholder..& it would be sub $800..

now we think that the placeholder pirce was better..because its $1300!!!! Damn...
Posted on Reply
#16
Vya Domus
TheinsanegamerNOMG its like every flagship GPU since the 680
No, it's not.
Posted on Reply
#17
Caring1
I'd hate to order one of these if I stuttered "PNY GeForce RTX 2080 8GB XLR8 Gaming Overclocked Edition Triple Fan"
There aint that much time in the day. :laugh:
Posted on Reply
#18
droopyRO
Any word on the 2070 prices ?
Posted on Reply
#20
27MaD
But the real question is .......................... CAN IT RUN CRYSIS ?
Posted on Reply
#21
windwhirl
27MaDBut the real question is .......................... CAN IT RUN CRYSIS ?
The 1080 Ti, I think, can run Crysis 3 at 4K with everything maxed out at nearly 50 FPS just by itself, no SLI involved. So, the 2080 should be capable of pulling off at least that much.
Posted on Reply
#22
Prince Valiant
What's the point of suggested pricing if garbage bin blower cards are a 25% bump over that :eek:?
Posted on Reply
#23
27MaD
windwhirlThe 1080 Ti, I think, can run Crysis 3 at 4K with everything maxed out at nearly 50 FPS just by itself, no SLI involved. So, the 2080 should be capable of pulling off at least that much.
i was joking :laugh::laugh: , and i am talking about CRYSIS 1 , it's known with it's shity engine & optimization.
I tried to run it once with my pc and guess what ! , my 750 TI was running at 100% , so much stuttering huge FPS drops (30-+ FPS) , even my stupid core 2 duo was running at 60-70% LOL .
tried it at 720p high settings.
FleuriousLooks nice enough, but since my PNY 780 Ti died I’ll just be avoiding the brand for a while.
Well , i havn't tried PNY GPUs , but i always feel like it's the best brand after Asus , Gigabyte , MSI , EVGA.
Posted on Reply
#24
Vya Domus
Prince ValiantWhat's the point of suggested pricing
To catch your attention for a split second while looking at Nvidia's marketing material.
Posted on Reply
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