RTX 2080 - 2080 Ti - 2070 Pricing Revealed

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2080Ti FE $1199, 4352 cuda cores, 1350 base - 1635 MHz boost, 11GB GDDR6 14 Gbps (616 GB/s bandwidth) 260W  14.2 TFLOPS
2080Ti     $999, 4352 cuda cores, 1350 base - 1545 MHz boost, 11GB GDDR6 14 Gbps (616 GB/s bandwidth) 250W  13.4 TFLOPS  10 Gigarays
2080 FE    $799, 2944 cuda cores, 1515 base - 1800 MHz boost,  8GB GDDR6 14 Gbps (448 GB/s bandwidth) 225W  10.6 TFLOPS
2080       $699, 2944 cuda cores, 1515 base - 1710 MHz boost,  8GB GDDR6 14 Gbps (448 GB/s bandwidth) 215W  10.1 TFLOPS   8 Gigarays
2070 FE    $599, 2304 cuda cores, 1410 base - 1710 MHz boost,  8GB GDDR6 14 Gbps (448 GB/s bandwidth) 185W   7.9 TFLOPS
2070       $499, 2304 cuda cores, 1410 base - 1620 MHz boost,  8GB GDDR6 14 Gbps (448 GB/s bandwidth) 175W   7.5 TFLOPS   6 Gigarays

1080Ti FE  $699, 3584 cuda cores, 1480 base - 1582 MHz boost, 8GB GDDR5X 11 Gbps (484 GB/s bandwidth) 250W  11.3 TFLOPS 1.2 Gigarays?
1080 FE    $549, 2560 cuda cores, 1607 base - 1733 MHz boost, 8GB GDDR5X 10 Gbps (320 GB/s bandwidth) 180W   8.9 TFLOPS
1070Ti FE  $449, 2432 cuda cores, 1607 base - 1683 MHz boost, 8GB GDDR5   8 Gbps (256 GB/s bandwidth) 180W   8.2 TFLOPS
1070 FE    $399, 1920 cuda cores, 1506 base - 1683 MHz boost, 8GB GDDR5   8 Gbps (256 GB/s bandwidth) 150W   6.5 TFLOPS
 
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So Kyle, sorry if its been asked 400 times already, but do we have any idea when the review embargo lifts?

EDIT well I mean I know your friends at Nvidia likely won't be sending you one, but I mean from sources if you weren't told directly.
 
I'm glad I usually buy used last gen stuff. 2070 for $600 is supposed to be 8% faster than a 1080. I can get a used 1080 for just over $300, half the price 92% of the performance.
 
Founders Editions ... nope.

I guess I'm sticking with my Titan Xps for a while more.
 
Have a 2080Ti on preorder and actually just a few more dollars than the Titan Xp ordered a few months back. Don't think the price is exorbitant for the latest and greatest. Now if benchmarks will hold up. Expect shortages and price gouging later down the line. And never bothered to install the Xp--still using the original 1080Ti! Just a (w)hardware whore. Need to unload the current cards to a needy family.
 
Jensen had a slide up toward the end of the presentation that said;

RTX 2800Ti - $1000USD
RTX 2800 - $699.99USD
RTX 2700 - $499.99USD

So the prices that caused up a stir in this thread were wrong.

I paid $700 for my founders Edition GTX 1080, and the GTX 1080 Ti came out for more than $1000 at launch if I'm not mistaken. Seems like the prices are holding still or slightly dropping for the cards. I can't wait for the reviews.


look at the slide again.........
"FROM" $999 for the 2080Ti

"from $999" doesn't mean that the actual ones you can buy at this time are $999... Look at Kyle's Order confirmation... $1199 each.
Go ahead and try to buy a 2080Ti for $999...............


But, but the CEO said so, so it must be true!!!!

$999 is hardly any better for a xx80 Ti variant.

$1000 + should be reserved for the Titans
 
Jensen had a slide up toward the end of the presentation that said;

RTX 2800Ti - $1000USD
RTX 2800 - $699.99USD
RTX 2700 - $499.99USD

So the prices that caused up a stir in this thread were wrong.

I paid $700 for my founders Edition GTX 1080, and the GTX 1080 Ti came out for more than $1000 at launch if I'm not mistaken. Seems like the prices are holding still or slightly dropping for the cards. I can't wait for the reviews.

Still pretty high. We're now at $500-600 for a upper mid range GPU. The GTX 970 was a good buy at $330, with higher end models being around $350-360 which is what people actually buy. The 1070's actual price was $400-450 for along time. It only dropped after many months (almost a year) on the market. Even then those were the models that weren't worth getting from a noise/cooling perspective. If it "starts at" $500, the actual price will be around $600. That is a pretty big jump. Don't think we've had ~90% inflation these past four years to justify the extra cost.
 
Same here with my Titan XP. (For the moment) I most likely will reconsider once a few reviews are in or a few months pass. (Or if a newer Titan model comes out i probably will get it to if it's really good). :wacky:
Been planning my new 9900K build but it will be a few months anyhow before i get all the parts so this works for me.
 
So just pre-ordered 2 2080 Ti FEs and the 3 slot NVLink bridge, estimated delivery date 10/08/2018. Any recommended CPUs specs for these things? I'm assuming a 6950x at 4.3 shouldn't have any problems especially at 4k.
 
If someone buys a Best Buy TV for $599 that is ho-hum, if someone buys the 2070 for $599 that is also fine.
 
And X for Xtreme, of course.

So...looks like NVIDIA is going all in on trying to make ray tracing a thing in games now, huh?

Yeah its like TVs & phones, they need some gimmick because people will be less inclined to buy it if its 'just a bit faster'. :D
 
I went back and looked up my orders.

I paid: $530 ea for a new GTX 780 x 2 - Ran SLI
I paid: $580 ea for a new GTX 980ti x 2 - Ran SLI
I paid: $780 for a new GTX 1080ti

Performance versus cost made sense for me.

So, if the next card is about double the performance of the 1080ti then the price should be ~$1000.
 
Fucking hell, computer tech is getting way too expensive a hobby now. I was always willing to go a little far out of the "good value" areas for some of the best tech. But there is no way I can justify $1000 (or whatever it costs here in Blighty) for one fucking card. Maybe if it's twice as fast as a stock 1080, it might be justified.

I bought a 4870X2 back in the day. It was like £350 or something. Up to £400 for the absolute best card on the market was fair I felt. Just bothered to look, and the cheapest 2080 Ti on Scan is £1,049.99. Admittedly it's an aftermarket one. Still outrageous. Looks like I will be sticking with AMD's more value-oriented tech. Whenever that comes.
 
LOL look at all the 1080 Ti's in the "for sale" forum being posted. I think more people are going for the 2080's than originally thought!
 
Wait for Vega (7nm edition this time).

Honestly, that pricing is just stupid. Plus, I’m in the position of needing a full upgrade right now, so add a Gsync monitor on top of that, and suddenly, Freesync and a AMD card is looking like an absolute steal, I don’t care how it affects my e-peen.
 
LOL, I said the tope end card would be $999.99 for the TI version....I was foolish. :-P Sticking with my Vega setup.
 
well they raised their prices hoping mining continues but "mining" will be phased out as non-mining centric cryptos emerge. seems like they are shooting their base to make high end gpus for mining. why not make high end mining cards instead and lower cost gaming cards? well they would then have to go back to smaller profit margins.

this is nuts
 
it would be great to launch a hashtag , #just1generation , for ppl buying low to high end GTX 50-60-70-80 to just switch to AMD for just 1 generation, just slap nvidia in the face and give AD more money to comeback with a better competing line up next gen, to finaly have competition in discret gpu market, all it would take is #just1generation.
nothing to lose, everything to gain, just need ppl to understand what's best for them in the long run.

The idea of pity buying AMD on some mickey mouse notion that they're the little engine that could, is kind of absurd. They are a monolithic, multinational megacorp run by multi-millionaires with seven figure salaries.

If AMD was in Nvidia's position, not only would they be executing their business plan exactly the same, but they would be legally obligated to do so by their shareholders. It really helps to understand that GPU manufacturing is a business, not fanboy highschool.

What's best for people is continuing to do what they've always done - nothing is really going to change this - and that is buying the most performance they can afford.
 
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That's child logic. People aren't going to pay more for less performance from a monolithic megacorp run by multi-millionaires because AMD is the little engine that could. If AMD was in Nvidia's position, not only would they continue to execute their business plan exactly the same, but they would be legally obligated by their shareholders to do so. It really helps to understand that GPU manufacturing is a business, not fanboy highschool.

What's best for people is continuing to do what they've always done - nothing is really going to change this - and that is buying the most performance they can afford.

But AMD doesn't have less performance in MOST categories. The only cards they can't compete with are the 1080ti and up. Which is less than 5% of the market.
 
I splurged on a 1080 Ti. I still feel bad about it, even though it plays anything I throw at it @2k.

This is just...nope. I'll wait another year or two before I even think about it. I don't care if ray tracing is the future.
 
I'm glad I usually buy used last gen stuff. 2070 for $600 is supposed to be 8% faster than a 1080. I can get a used 1080 for just over $300, half the price 92% of the performance.
1080 Ti. They said the RTX 2070 is 8% faster than a 1080 Ti.
well they raised their prices hoping mining continues but "mining" will be phased out as non-mining centric cryptos emerge. seems like they are shooting their base to make high end gpus for mining. why not make high end mining cards instead and lower cost gaming cards? well they would then have to go back to smaller profit margins.

this is nuts
On the contrary. I think this pricing is to keep miners out. No way smart miners will invest that kind of money into a new tech that has yet to be proven on any of the current crypto algorithms out there.
 
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So this is what insisting upon continuing blockchain frenzy pricing trends combined with the ability to insist on monopoly pricing in the high-end graphics card space looks like.

What AMD has started doing to Intel it now needs to do even more so to Nvidia. This is ridiculous pricing.
 
1080 Ti. They said the RTX 270 is 8% faster than a 1080 Ti.

On the contrary. I think this pricing is to keep miners out. No way smart miners will invest that kind of money into a new tech that has yet to be proven on any of the current crypto algorithms out there.

Pretty sure i read it was the 1080 as well, not the Ti.
 
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