Monday, January 17th 2022
NVIDIA's Custom RTX 3090 Ti Graphics Cards Reach $4,000 Pricing in Europe
NVIDIA's RTX 3090 Ti is hot on the presses, and while actual product availability is anyone's guess, the card has already been made available for order (in extremely limited quantities, as one might expect). That said, the lack of a clear pricing messaging from NVIDIA seems to have left the door open for truly egregious pricing practices, which are likely added to at every step of the supply chain from the green team's AIB (add-in-board) partners and their custom RTX 3090 Ti graphics cards. Case in point: European, Swiss retailer Top Preise has started listing the latest NVIDIA halo card at a cool, not at all jaw-dropping average of €3,600 ($4,000). This is easily the highest-ever-pricing practiced on a consumer-level graphics card, so if anything, 2022 seems to have at least brought us that particular record-setting. Of course, pricing of a single retailer doesn't prove a pricing trend; but the fact that the cards are priced at untidy values does seem to indicate these aren't placeholder values.
This is much the case as has happened with NVIDIA's recent launch of the RTX 3080 12 GB - that card too didn't receive public MSRP guidance from NVIDIA, leaving its board partners - and retailers - to carve whatever pricing philosophy they deem adequate, considering the current state of the market, expected demand for NVIDIA's latest and greatest, and, of course, additional profits. Considering how the RTX 3080 12 GB has been found in store shelves for around $1,700 (remember the original MSRP for the RTX 3080 8 GB was set at $699), an upgrade to the RTX 3090 Ti would be a very expensive, $2,300 proposition for a relatively small performance improvement.
Sources:
Top Preise, Tom's Hardware
This is much the case as has happened with NVIDIA's recent launch of the RTX 3080 12 GB - that card too didn't receive public MSRP guidance from NVIDIA, leaving its board partners - and retailers - to carve whatever pricing philosophy they deem adequate, considering the current state of the market, expected demand for NVIDIA's latest and greatest, and, of course, additional profits. Considering how the RTX 3080 12 GB has been found in store shelves for around $1,700 (remember the original MSRP for the RTX 3080 8 GB was set at $699), an upgrade to the RTX 3090 Ti would be a very expensive, $2,300 proposition for a relatively small performance improvement.
111 Comments on NVIDIA's Custom RTX 3090 Ti Graphics Cards Reach $4,000 Pricing in Europe
Too lazy to click and calculate? It's around €4060. Around €3600 if you pay cash. Ti's are nowhere to be found. Not that I would be able to afford it if it was in stores. :(
3090's are available. If you are interested in buying no matter the price. :laugh: And they have FREE delivery. What a steal. :roll:
Another interesting POV: corporate is all Apple for exactly those reasons. You have just one environment to cater to for all devices your employees have. Its the same sort of success Microsoft is enjoying with its cloud and enterprise services: one size fits all, and in being that, its manageable to work with and keep resilient. It also allows companies to outsource a big part of their security while maintaining a form of control over it. And yes, those services are really, really expensive. Licensing for MS Azure for example... you don't even wanna see those figures, its like a 5 star restaurant menu.
Note how this 3090 really carries none of such USPs. Its just two letters for a percentile gap in performance connected to a massive price increase.
tweakers.net/nieuws/192078/nvidia-stopt-productie-geforce-rtx-3090-ti-vanwege-bios-en-hardwareproblemen.html
English ver
newsofamerica.org/2022/01/15/nvidia-reportedly-stops-production-of-rtx-3090-ti-graphics-cards/
And to absolutely shove the consumer love up our asses they're on hold, delayed until whenever, likely just got a bid from a mining firm for the whole lot.
Wait. I take that back. That'll only increase prices further.
It is simple just don't buy them , let them choke on their prices.
I moved last year from Phenom X6 1100T to 5775C just because it was very cheap (and the beefy 128MB L4 cache) and for the games I play (WoT,CS:GO, Dota 2) I seriously don't see any reason or need of a faster system at the moment (yet because I'm and AMD fanboy I'll definetly take some of their offerings with the extra L3 cache mostly because it will be the last platform to be able to run Win 7).See 22 years ago when the game was running at 25FPS at lowest settings, the IE and the pages were taking ages to process , when you search a file and you can leave the PC to scratch while you make yourself a coffee and have a smoke in the mean time , there was reason to get next gen hardware.This days it just doesn't matter if your work is not literraly based on "the more the better" like rendering stuff.
So really why do you all care that much about the hardware this days given the fact that you can spend this amounts of money for way better things.No reason to spend them to play Dirt Rally 2-3-4 when you can get any car for least and go trash it. Or fly on MS Flight Sim when you can actually trip to multiple destinations.
Would one go for a comparable build with current hardware, assuming somewhat normal GPU prices, one would have a very hard time to do it with 1500€. o_O
Some will say: “It is only supply and demand!” Sure! In parts, certainly. But that also only really works in a healthy market. Between floods, epidemics, fires, economic recessions, temporary monopolies, crypto crazes, stagnation in innovation, shortages, etc. there were very few stretches with a healthy microelectronics market and plenty of competition going on.
Current prizes are a sickly amalgam of all of the above with a “healthy” dose of (corporate) greed incorporated. :_(
aaaaaaannnddd ... yeah Swiss pricing is out of .... [heavily censored]
i am so glad to be Swiss ...
(although i am somewhat oddly proud to see that site as a reference on TPU ... :lovetpu: )
to quote myself ... "MSRP? what's that? a Unicorn?"
@darksf 175 eur a 1070? my 1070 was 526chf 5 years ago :laugh:
@Raevenlord price is in Chf (Swiss Francs) not Eur, although Euro rate is quite close to Chf... 3600 Chf make 3451.09 Eur (1chf/0.96eur that's a historical low :laugh: )