NVIDIA Planning Aggressive RTX 50 GPU Price Cuts Amid Pressure From Reduced Sales, Expected Soon as This Month

Pressure from reduced sales??
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The data center sector generated revenue of $115.19 billion, representing 88.27% of total revenue.

They don't give a shit about selling less gpus to gamers. Who believes this shit??🤣🤦🏼‍♂️
AIB and retailers care. Do you think AIBs are going to buy the chips if they can't currently clear stock?
 
By "aggressive price cuts" do they mean $5 off and bundling it with a shitty game nobody asked for?

Can't wait to get the MindsEye brack-Friday buduru.
 
Still over 600 bucks canadian for the 16GB version of the 5060. I think i paid less for my GeForce 970 (last midrange video card I bought).
 
I don't know where the optimism comes from.
The more the time goes, the more the discrete GPU market for gaming becomes a NEGLIGIBLE portion of Nvidia's business.
The demand for their hardware in AI/data center is so high that they are basically booked for years to come.

They are under NO pressure to lower the prices whatsoever. If they decide to do it, it's only because they want to and it's not a guarantee it will apply to their next lineup.
Yeah this makes no sense. The big AI players would just buy up the high end cards. The only thing I can see happening is a reduction for the mid-lower end cards to clear stock for the incoming supers.
 
Cheapest 5080 is around $1400. So price cuts will be a whopping $400 to bring it to the price they said they were supposed to be in the first place. It appears to be a huge price cut because they have been gouging $400 out of us already.
 
I see Nvidia shut down the previous article, WCCFTECH has no integrity.
Nvidia did this so it would not spread as a news, this would paint RTX 5000 series as undesirable and lower the sales even more.
 
I see Nvidia shut down the previous article, WCCFTECH has no integrity.
Nvidia did this so it would not spread as a news, this would paint RTX 5000 series as undesirable and lower the sales even more.
I don't think Nvidia can do that.

however, I also think the article is kinda misleading too. The only reason they would do a move is to clear inventory before the Super series byhe end of the year. not for anything else.

There is no other alternative to high end GPUs to have a price reduction. there is nothing as powerful as say 5080 from the AMD side. so people who wanted to buy anything high, they will have to pay whatever they like it or not.

This is just more of clearing inventory a little bit
 
why would nvidia reduce price when it's pretty much a monopoly?

the price is going to fall back to MSRP to clear inventory before the super variants hit the market.
 
Here in Germany/Netherlands the 5070/5070 Ti/5080 can all be had for under MSRP. The 5070/5070 Ti can be had for significantly under MSRP. 5090 is very close to MSRP as well.

Only the 5080/5090 in the US seem a bit above MSRP still.
 
The cheapest 5070 on Overclockers (UK) is currently £480 (was £540). For a 5080 it's £930 (down from £1000). For a 5090 it's £1930 (cheapest model was previously £2030). Some models are more expensive but have bigger discounts.
 
Microcenter already cutting prices on some cards by 200 or more. That said prices are still too high. Also with the supers coming I'd still hold off
 
I saw this thread and went to check the NVIDIA site as I have been doing since the RTX 5080 launched.

Previously, this GPU was always listed as out of stock but now it is in-stock and at £949 for the Founders Edition. This is £100 less that uglier third-party offerings but the irony is that with the rumour of a price drop, I cannot realistic order this card if it is going to drop in price sometime soon. I'd be kicking myself for not waiting.

What makes this a bit easier is that I have had to wait so long to buy this GPU now that I am a whole less excited about it anyway.
 
I will say straight up that I don't buy it in the slightest.
nvidia pretty much has never dropped prices for the fuck of it.

The original 1080 got a price drop when a new model with new RAM came out.

But that's it.

What most likely will happen is that current models will probably start getting sold closer to MSRP.
 
I saw this thread and went to check the NVIDIA site as I have been doing since the RTX 5080 launched.

Previously, this GPU was always listed as out of stock but now it is in-stock and at £949 for the Founders Edition. This is £100 less that uglier third-party offerings but the irony is that with the rumour of a price drop, I cannot realistic order this card if it is going to drop in price sometime soon. I'd be kicking myself for not waiting.

What makes this a bit easier is that I have had to wait so long to buy this GPU now that I am a whole less excited about it anyway.
The 5000 series GPUs are underwhelming. Its basically a rehash of the 4000 series.

No generational uplift. Ray tracing basically had no gains. Any performance increase was followed by a power increase.
 
But, but what about the tariffs ?
The 5080 is currently significantly cheaper in the EU vs the USA on the order of 200-300 dollars when taking into consideration tax and currency differences. ~1020 Euro (including tax) vs ~1250 Dollars (no tax). Historically, even when taking stuff like that into consideration, GPUs in the EU have usually been more expensive.
 
The 5000 series GPUs are underwhelming. Its basically a rehash of the 4000 series.

No generational uplift. Ray tracing basically had no gains. Any performance increase was followed by a power increase.

Very true, plus 32-bit PhysX support was removed and multi-framegen was added as a selling feature and to artificially inflate the performance benchmarks (or at least that is what NVIDIA wanted all the reviewers to do).

I do own a RTX 4080 Founders Edition so upgrading really would have been a waste of money and I'd be better off waiting for the rumoured Super variants with more VRAM (assuming I could even pre-order one) or just waiting for the RTX 60 series.
 
Microcenter website lets you see the actual # in stock at each store. I've been watching 5090 inventory for a while and practically NOBODY is buying these. Even when they had $300 off one model early this summer (bringing the price down to a still insane $2500) they barely even budged.

Now most models are $200-$300 cheaper than they were a few months ago and the inventory keeps growing.


Honestly it restores my faith in gamers just a tiny bit. We FINALLY found that gamers have a breaking point
 
Very true, plus 32-bit PhysX support was removed and multi-framegen was added as a selling feature and to artificially inflate the performance benchmarks (or at least that is what NVIDIA wanted all the reviewers to do).

I do own a RTX 4080 Founders Edition so upgrading really would have been a waste of money and I'd be better off waiting for the rumoured Super variants with more VRAM (assuming I could even pre-order one) or just waiting for the RTX 60 series.
Even with more memory, unless you are running workloads that are making you memory starved, there's no real reason to get a new cards for the 12-15% performance uplift. Only the 5070 Super is getting more GPU cores, the 5070ti and 5080 are just getting the memory bump with a 15% power increase meaning you might see higher clocks, but is that something you can't do on your current card already?

The AI rendering tech in the card could be interesting. But I feel it will end up like raytracing on the 2000 series. Games will finally start using it near the end of the card's life cycle but will perform too slowly, with the 6000 cards being a good jump. Just like 2000 -> 3000 was. We're already seeing a little of what's possible where enabling DLSS can provide visuals that look better than a native 4K render in some instances. The big question will be what AMD and Intel cook up to compete. But if history repeats, AMD won't have an answer and RDNA5/UDNA are still solid performers and get integrated into the PS6 and next XBOX. But PC gets three generations of GPU development and quickly overtake the consoles.
 
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