crazycrave
[H]ard|Gawd
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2016
- Messages
- 1,770
To me it's more about what you get for a 100watt card then what we wasted our money on in the past. RX 6600 is a piece of artwork for $200
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Pretty sure it's a bot.Did you major in posting pointless crap?
Your few posts made since joining show we're in for a treat.
Yep, same in the UK.I think that the rise of High End PC Gaming coincided with the decline of the post crash Arcade scene. At least in the US, also there's no denying that software plays an integral role here. After all there needs to be a killer app. However I believe that period is the most pronounced and easily recognizable combination of social and economic factors.
Ultimately I believe that gaming generations exist between those technological and economic cycles.
... Is Low-end Gaming Dead?
<silly youtube thumbnail>
... and the quality of games available.
Just curious, did you mean to say RX 6500XT? Based on what I am reading, the RX 6600 is a 132W GPU with a $329 MSRP (although it does look like it is being sold for as cheap as $250 on Newegg).To me it's more about what you get for a 100watt card then what we wasted our money on in the past. RX 6600 is a piece of artwork for $200
Have been running a 1660 Super (~130W) + i7 6700 in a Dell Optiplex 5040 MT without issuesI wish that I could have bought a RX 6600 for my 300W system. At this point in time, as sad as it is, I think that the 1650 Super is still the king of 6-pin connector 100W GPU's.
With the exception of RT I agree.Just be patient and buy used.
Most people have had zero reason to upgrade in the last 3-4 years. Frankly even the long in the tooth 1080Ti is more than sufficient for what most people want to do gaming wise if you're playing at 1080p. And those can be picked up on the second hand market at this point for a song.
5700XT's also sell for $200 or sometimes less on second hand markets.
nVidia and AMD both want to manufacturer ultra premium priced cards that only a very small amount of people want. It won't be this way forever. And definitely don't feel like you have to give them your money.
This is a very fair and accurate point...You people keep looking at the market from the DIY pov. Most people end up buying crappy over priced Dells or worst something from the big box stores. Most people don't understand computers outside the very basics.
I could see an argument for the exact opposite, it became extremely mainstream with a whole pundit industry around it and giant amount of hardware toward it instead of just some niche affair.Which kind of answers the question with a resounding yes.
High End PC Gaming became too niche.
Just curious, did you mean to say RX 6500XT? Based on what I am reading, the RX 6600 is a 132W GPU with a $329 MSRP (although it does look like it is being sold for as cheap as $250 on Newegg).
I wish that I could have bought a RX 6600 for my 300W system. At this point in time, as sad as it is, I think that the 1650 Super is still the king of 6-pin connector 100W GPU's.
No, the RX 6600 that I have is bios locked to 100watts, it can do up to 120watts if you slide the power level, you see the card and power level in this video, I was asked to test 1440p for someone on an RX 6600
This isn't going to work. Remember that we're at the point of the lowest discrete GPU sales in 20 years. That means the number of newer but used cards out there is smaller. On top of that the terrible high prices of most new cards will stop a lot of people from buying new meaning there are even more people looking to the used market. Additionally there are the people who aren't going to be selling their cards because they're not buying new cards which decreases the number on the used market and even if some people get new cards there is no guarantee they're going to sell the old card. I've seen quite a few people already state they're not selling their old cards because they need to make sure they have some sort of backup. All of this is going to lead to higher than normal demand with a lower than normal supply of used cards. The original price for these used cards were already high and people selling them will want the most they can get out of them. Do not expect to see a large number of used cards for sale anytime soon but do expect the used cards you see to be priced quite high relatively speaking.Just be patient and buy used.
This is a lot of words for: you waited and figured it out.This isn't going to work. Remember that we're at the point of the lowest discrete GPU sales in 20 years. That means the number of newer but used cards out there is smaller. On top of that the terrible high prices of most new cards will stop a lot of people from buying new meaning there are even more people looking to the used market. Additionally there are the people who aren't going to be selling their cards because they're not buying new cards which decreases the number on the used market and even if some people get new cards there is no guarantee they're going to sell the old card. I've seen quite a few people already state they're not selling their old cards because they need to make sure they have some sort of backup. All of this is going to lead to higher than normal demand with a lower than normal supply of used cards. The original price for these used cards were already high and people selling them will want the most they can get out of them. Do not expect to see a large number of used cards for sale anytime soon but do expect the used cards you see to be priced quite high relatively speaking.
There's a reason I finally replaced my Radeon RX570 (which I bought new for $120) with a Radeon RX6750xt for $400 new recently. That was the max I could afford to spend and for the most part it was a steal of a deal in the current market. I still need to get a 1440p monitor eventually but there's a very good chance the 6750xt will last me several years. Here's to hoping that in that time period some sanity comes back to pricing in the GPU market.
No, I didn't wait and figure it out. I had no choice and with some luck found a good deal when I happened to have more cash than usual. Besides that I spent more than I wanted to.This is a lot of words for: you waited and figured it out.
Tons of stuff also on the used market. Just perusing our own boards shows stuff in there as is there plenty of things on CL/FB.
Life or death?No, I didn't wait and figure it out. I had no choice and with some luck found a good deal when I happened to have more cash than usual. Besides that I spent more than I wanted to.
Everything you're describing is a choice, based around some level of desperation as if things won't ever change. Just last year used cars costed as much as new cars. Now the used car market is trying to hold, but no one is buying. CarMax is already letting investors know that sales are down 40% and auctions are down by more than half. They're actively NOT buying (used) inventory because they recognize that buying right now is a bad idea as cars will drop in price and that market will bottom out.And what are the prices on the used stuff? Are there really any "deals"? Something that isn't already 4+ years old? There is the occasional person who talks about a deal they got on a used card but it's generally quite rare and likely to become even more rare.
It seems kind of silly to buy an entire PC unless you're basically starting from scratch, but I doubt that applies to anyone here. The last time I got a brand new complete PC was 1997, a first-generation Intel Pentium. Prior to that I had been using a combo of hand-me-down Macintosh computers combined with hand-me-down 386 computers. I had to start from somewhere. But ever since then, every "new" PC I've built has involved bringing over many significant parts from my previous computer. I usually stagger the big purchases. CPU + Mobo (if necessary) + RAM (if necessary), and then 1-3 years later upgrade my GPU, then 1-3 years later upgrade my CPU, etc, again. Hard drives, case, etc, get upgraded when needed. Basically a continuous rolling-upgrade that almost never involves me having to spend more than half of what it would cost to build a new PC at any one time.
.....so? That doesn't really excuse the sheer greed being pushed in the GPU market atm.I will always stand behind the fact that PC gaming when compared to other hobbies, is a much cheaper hobby, even today with $1500+ video cards.
I didnt say it did.....so? That doesn't really excuse the sheer greed being pushed in the GPU market atm.
Fair. it just sounded like a way of excusing it. Or at least some have used that same line of thought to shrug it away as nothing. "Cost of a movie ticket for X time"...etc.I didnt say it did
My 4090 cost me less than my 3090, stop with the hyperbole......so? That doesn't really excuse the sheer greed being pushed in the GPU market atm.
Just because you paid a scalper for a 3090 and got lucky and didn't have to pay a scalper for a 4090 doesn't make the 4090 cheaper.My 4090 cost me less than my 3090, stop with the hyperbole.
Just because you paid a scalper for a 3090 and got lucky and didn't have to pay a scalper for a 4090 doesn't make the 4090 cheaper.
Offical price in Denmark for shops, not "scalpers":Just because you paid a scalper for a 3090 and got lucky and didn't have to pay a scalper for a 4090 doesn't make the 4090 cheaper.