1-5 of 5 Answers
Sorry to say it bro. It ain’t gonna happen. They like to see us fight over it like starving children fighting for food
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.You can go to the EVGA website and sign up to be notified kinda like a preorder. It will give you 8 hours to buy it when you get notified.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Yes but good luck with that. My cousin and I have been on the waiting list since one month after it released.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Whenever they make them available for sale, I guarantee you 100% of them will be claimed in less than a minute (if botters have worked their way around Best Buy's latest countermeasures then maybe less than a second). It wouldn't matter if they put them up for preorder with an estimated release date several months away and not guaranteed - they'd still all be gone by whatever people (or scripts) were lucky enough to click the button first. If you are in the market for a GPU right now, you have a few options: 1. Pay well over a grand for a current gen card from some scalper on Amazon or eBay or any of the other storefronts that have "third party merchants" listing these cards at outrageous markup. Congrats on being rich! 2. Settle for something VERY out of date and still get gouged for it. I could sell my current card from 2016 and probably get at least $700 for it - it cost me less than half that when it was brand new. The only GPU Best Buy currently has in stock is the GeForce GT 710, a $40 ultra low end card from 5 years ago that was considered very underwhelming by reviewers back then and now costs $70. 3. Get absurdly lucky and happen to check Best Buy or one of the handful of other places that lists these cards at MSRP when they get any in stock at precisely the right moment, and have fast hands and a fast internet connection to maybe have a slim shot at actually ordering one before they're all gone. 4. Hunt for deals on prebuilt systems with quasi-modern GPUs that haven't had their prices massively adjusted due to the demand for those cards - you can sometimes find a prebuilt with a given card these days for pretty close to the same price as the GPU itself goes for, so if you can either make use of or resell a decent proportion of the other components, you might manage to effectively get an almost decent price in the end on the GPU. 5. Wait however long it takes this apocalyptic GPU market to settle back down. It will probably be at least a couple more months; personally, I'd place the over-under at around november/early december - I'm sure Nvidia and AMD will do everything humanly possible to produce enough supply to meet demand by the holiday season, but I'm not sure how likely they are to succeed. 6. If you find yourself stuck with no working GPU at all and don't have integrated graphics on your CPU, leaving your PC unable to even send a signal to a monitor, your best bet is probably to see if there are any CPUs that will fit in your motherboard socket and have integrated graphics. They're of little to no use to cryptocurrency miners, since it's a lot harder to put a bunch of extra CPUs into one system than it is to put extra GPUs and the integrated graphics in most CPUs that have any to begin with are much less powerful than a modern "real" GPU. So they're generally not outrageously expensive right now, just a bit marked up because of other people resorting to doing the same. But maybe you'll get lucky and find a CPU that is an upgrade over your current one and has integrated graphics while yours doesn't. Or at least one that's comparable as a CPU to your current one. Alternatively... maybe buy a cheap laptop like a Chromebook as you wait out the storm with the rest of us.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Will be botted and scalped so good luck
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