- Joined
- Jan 27, 2015
- Messages
- 1,747 (0.48/day)
System Name | Legion |
---|---|
Processor | i7-12700KF |
Motherboard | Asus Z690-Plus TUF Gaming WiFi D5 |
Cooling | Arctic Liquid Freezer 2 240mm AIO |
Memory | PNY MAKO DDR5-6000 C36-36-36-76 |
Video Card(s) | PowerColor Hellhound 6700 XT 12GB |
Storage | WD SN770 512GB m.2, Samsung 980 Pro m.2 2TB |
Display(s) | Acer K272HUL 1440p / 34" MSI MAG341CQ 3440x1440 |
Case | Montech Air X |
Power Supply | Corsair CX750M |
Mouse | Logitech MX Anywhere 25 |
Keyboard | Logitech MX Keys |
Software | Lots |
The only bad information here is that you are implying that $350 is the price the card was broadly available for. $350 was the founder's edition price which almost no one saw. Aside from the scalping, AIB pricing started at $400+ as was usual when comparing founders edition to non-founders edition.
Mind you that's comparing the 6GB 2060 to the 6GB 1060. Zero increase in VRAM. The 12GB 2060 cost a whopping $600 at time of review on TechPowerUp.
You paid $309 for a 2060 KO, which launched March 3rd 2020, a whopping 14 MONTHS after the Jan 7th 2019 launch of the 2060. Suffice to say, it's extremely misleading to compare late generation prices to MSRP.
It is you who is trying to interject "market price" from 3-4 years ago. I am using MSRP. I'll keep on using MRSP. The reasoning for using that to compare has been explained ad nauseum not only here, but on countless other sites. If demand is too high, then the AIBs and retailers pocket the difference. If it's too low, then they take a hit. MSRP is the only thing we have, anything else is chaos and cherry picking.
My comment about paying $309 was just pointing out that I got a discount on the card by buying late in the cycle, since you seemed dead set on comparing discounted prices to new release prices, or high demand scalp prices to MSRP. Anyone can do that, just cherry pick launch vs mid cycle vs late cycle, crypto bust vs crypto mania. That's chaos.
As I said, I think MSRP is the only reasonable way to compare pricing. And +$50 on a $299 card is only +16.7%. For that you get +45% at 1080P and +67% at 4K. That's not hard to understand.
You admitted you own a 2060 and I believe your ownership is clouding your judgement in this case. Even when you take the best turning SKU value wise in the best possible light it's at best underwhelming.
That's a laugh. I posted charts, I've been posting charts, I don't usually say stuff without proof when it comes to numbers because proof is so easy to find. It's 45% faster than 1060 at 1080P and 67% faster at 4K. I paid about $30 over what the 1660 Ti was selling for at the time (about 12% more) to get +20% over that card. The reason was likely because everyone said that the 2060 wasn't worth it, which drove up 1660 Ti demand, while the 2060 wasn't selling. So I got to take advantage of both bad information in circulation and its results. I don't do these things because fanboy gibberish like you imply, I do it because the math works out, and I already showed that it did.