Tuesday, March 11th 2008
XFX Cuts 8800 and 9600 Prices
XFX, one of the main NVIDIA GeForce graphics card manufacturers, has decided to try and outsell rivals by cutting prices on its 8800 GT, 8800 GS and 9600 GT cards. All three standard versions of the cards will now be $30 cheaper thanks to mail-in rebates being offered by online retailers such as Newegg and TigerDirect. This means that the 512MB 8800 GT will now sell for $189 including a copy of Company of Heroes: Opposing Fronts, the 384MB 8800 GS will now cost $119.99 and the 9600 GT has a new price tag of $149. The overclocked versions of the 8800 GS and 9600 GT are also seeing price drops of $30 and $20 respectively, which means they will now be sold for $139.99 and $179.
Source:
Neoseeker
25 Comments on XFX Cuts 8800 and 9600 Prices
8800gs here I come :rockout:
XFX 8800GS 384 is $119 AR
XFX 9600GT 512 is $149 AR
XFX 8800GT 512 is $189 AR
XFX 8800GTS 512 is $299 AR
SLI is more affordable than ever but in reality the price to performance ratio hasn't changed because they *all* took a "price cut" I think it's still more efficient just to buy a GTS.
- Christine
Although that is just about as cheap as SLI will get so.......
- Christine
1./ Its financial window dressing, so that the company records higher revenues (albeit with higher costs). Makes the company "LOOK" like its growing revenues when in fact its not. This should be banned by accounting standards
2./ It hopes that many people dont bother with the mail-in rebate and so they dont have to give the discount to everyone. This should be stopped by some consumer protection laws, ie, advertise price X, but pay Y where Y > X. That's not right! And then only get money back if you jump through various hoops and wait.
3./ Risk of failure to process mail-in rebates 100%. The number of stories I've heard of people NOT getting there money, for whatever reason.
Why do companies STILL do this?
Plus, newegg lists the price before rebate as the the price for the item, they only mention the rebate below the price and give you the new price in a much smaller font. Again, this is because they don't want to decieve their customers, and they don't use the rebates as a way to draw customers in.