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Then there are the OEM Prices
EVGA - Products - Graphics - GeForce 20 Series Family - RTX 2080 Ti
NVIDIA® GeForce RTX™ delivers the ultimate PC gaming experience. Powered by the new NVIDIA Turing™ GPU architecture and the revolutionary RTX platform, RTX graphics cards bring together real-time ray tracing, artificial intelligence, and programmable shading. This is a whole new way to experience games.
You can pre-order the Founder Editions of the all three graphics cards right now. The GeForce RTX 2080 Ti is available for $1,199, the GeForce RTX 2080 for $799, and the GeForce RTX 2070 for $599. Both the GeForce RTX 2080 Ti and the GeForce RTX 2080 will ship on or around September 20th, with a limit of two per customer.
GeForce GPU Ray Tracing Performance* Memory Starting At Founders Edition RTX 2080 Ti 10 GigaRays/sec 78T RTX-OPS 11GB $999 $1,199 RTX 2080 8 GigaRays/sec 60T RTX-OPS 8GB $699 $799 RTX 2070 6 GigaRays/sec 45T RTX-OPS 8GB $499 $599
Read more:
- Introducing GeForce RTX Gaming Graphics Cards | NVIDIA
- 10 Years in the Making: NVIDIA Brings Real-Time Ray Tracing to Gamers with GeForce RTX | NVIDIA Newsroom
- NVIDIA Unveils GeForce RTX, World's First Real-Time Ray Tracing GPUs | The Official NVIDIA Blog
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Then there are the OEM Prices
EVGA - Products - Graphics - GeForce 20 Series Family - RTX 2080 Ti
Yeah, guess I'm not upgrading this generation.
Yeah I'm broke… Those prices on the OEMs are insanely priced though, what the frak.
Not really surprising, the top of the line cards always are bank breakers. Just wait for the lower end cards to come out.
I am waiting for benchmarks too. I think I will be running my GTX 1070 for a long time.
WOW, by the time these cards are available in Australia, people will have to get a BANK loan to pay for one.
At a minimum, it would be $1700.00 AUS and more realistically after the Australia Tax, would be closer to $2000.00
I just read this article: Nvidia RTX 20 Series: Why You Should Jump Off The Hype Train
Not that I read forbes often, but I have to somewhat agree with the author here. Turing doesn't seem to be worth it, it's basically just hyping people over to a new-born technology (which looks really neat, don't get me wrong), but it won't get traction in the video game scene till 2-3 years, by then Volta is already out with new gen 7nm chips. Nvidia showed 20 games to support ray tracing, but they are scattered and are "planned" releases, which doesn't confirm much apart from the real showcases from SOTR and Exodus. Turing is basically Pascal with Tensor cores that can run RT better, that's it. Is it really worth it to buy a new card for a minimum of $500 just to get better performance running real-time lighting in a few games that you may or may not buy? Once I asked myself that question I'm leaning towards not buying a 2070, unless I can get one on sale that makes sense upgrading from a 1070. I'm not going to pay $750 for a RTX 2070 anytime soon, because that what it costs in my country, not $500...