European prices for NVIDIA's GeForce RTX 40 series dropped by 5%.
Click here to post a comment for European prices for NVIDIA's GeForce RTX 40 series dropped by 5%. on our message forum
Glottiz
https://i.imgur.com/BlsG4Ya.png
pegasus1
Palit 4080 = £1,189.99 at OCUK
moab600
Just 8 more drops of 5% and it might be an OK card, even then probably not.
fantaskarsef
Somewhat ironically made me smirk to see the pictures of sold out cards in the OP.
kcajjones
Nvidia can suck it with these prices. Amd too. Bring back top end gpus at £650 and I'll bite.
AuerX
Let it go, your old girlfriend aint coming back.
H83
Well, with this massive price cut, i guess i no longer have an excuse for not buying a 4090 or 4080... 🙄
But not everything is lost to those who want a 4080: https://www.techpowerup.com/301789/nvidia-geforce-rtx-4080-could-get-a-price-cut-to-better-compete-with-rdna3
Of course this is just a rumor but it makes some sense.
bombardier
May be without 12VHPWR cable... o_O
Ivrogne
Not enough.
Undying
NCC1701D
AuerX
Horsepower has never been cheaper
Valken
Move along folks, nothing to see... Oh hey,there is a new PSVR2 coming out soon...
Moonbogg
4080 needs to be $600 and 4080Ti needs to be $700. Nvidia has doubled the price of GPUs on us since 10 series. People are paying high-end SLI prices for a single GPU now. What a bunch of suckers we are to let this happen.
fantaskarsef
cucaulay malkin
Supertribble
My 1080 Ti cost me £650, my 3080 FE cost me £650.
Now 4080 is 1200 quid? Clown world prices. Never ever will I pay that.
pegasus1
geogan
I did notice a week after I bought the 4080, it was dropped by £50 in price on scan website. No different really to the "two free games" offers that we used to get when buying GPUs... now for £1500, you don't even get a single free "premium" game!
mackintosh
It'll take several years for GPU prices to return to their pre-pandemic and pre-crapcoin pricing, but it'll happen eventually. Their reserves and shareholder goodwill will only last for so long before they have to drastically lower prices to stimulate demand. We've already seen these cycles before. This isn't the first, and it's definitely not the last.