Top 5 This Week

Related Posts

There’s actually some good graphics card news for a change: they’re getting cheaper

In a rare bout of good news, graphics card pricing appears to be heading back down to normal levels. Numbers from 3DCenter.org that track the average of the best prices for the latest Ampere and RDNA2 graphics cards show a downward trend over the last three weeks, and it makes for an encouraging sign of things to come. Could we finally see cards return to normal MSRPs before we enter the summer?

In the last three weeks, the average pricing for the best deals on AMD’s RDNA 2 cards has fallen from 63% above the MSRP to just 45%, while Nvidia’s cards have fallen from 77% above to just 57% above. Drops of 18% and 20% respectively.

There are a couple of important caveats with these numbers, but don’t let them be a buzz-kill to the idea that everything is going to be alright after all. These numbers were derived from major German and Austrian retailers, so aren’t necessarily in line with other retailers around the globe. It’s worth pointing out that the PC market in Germany is generally perceived to be in a healthy place, so don’t write it off for that.

The numbers are also impacted by recent releases. Both the AMD Radeon RX 6500 XT and the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050 were launched in January and are the cheapest cards of this generation for both camps—something that will obviously drive the average prices down. These do join fairly stacked families though, and this reduces their impact on those averages too.

Tips and advice

How to buy a graphics card: tips on buying a graphics card in the barren silicon landscape that is 2022

Will this trend continue? It’s hard to be optimistic here, as prices looked similar to this back in July 2021, just before prices rose again, potentially caused by an increase in the value of ethereum leading to an increased demand for mining cards. Cryptocurrencies did crash towards the end of January, but it was a somewhat short downturn and since then they’ve bounced back, meaning that demand could be about to increase again.

Here’s hoping history doesn’t repeat itself.

Popular Articles