While it’s real that board partners appreciate ASRock, Gigabyte, PowerColor, Sappemploy, and XFX generassociate accuse more for cards with fancier celderlying solutions, those aren’t the cards we’re talking about today. We’ve been tracking prices on ten particular models of the AMD 9070 and AMD 9070 XT that were originassociate presentd at their $550 and $600 MSRPs.
None of those cards are currently in stock at any retailer we’ve examineed — but some retailers have already modified their pricetags ahead of novel shipments. Here are the alters we’ve seen:
Not every retailer has alterd out the pricetags on every card. Best Buy, which only enumerateed a one model of the 9070 and 9070 XT at MSRP to begin with, hasn’t alterd those prices yet — though they’re confesstedly still out of stock. Micro Cgo in also still enumerates three models of 9070 and four model 9070 XT at MSRP, though all are out of stock.
On the Nvidia front, there doesn’t seem to be much retailer/board partner scalping going on yet, at least at convey inant US retailers. We’re tracking six separateent models of $550 RTX 5070, three separateent models of $750 RTX 5070 Ti, and three separateent models of $1,000 RTX 5080 which were originassociate enumerateed at MSRP prices. Best Buy, Newegg, and Micro Cgo in are still enumerateing the ones they stock at MSRP today.
Last week, AMD telderly us that “we foresee cards to be useable from multiple vendors at $549 / $599,” and that more cards are coming. AMD did not say which board partners or retailers would concur to recommend cards at those prices, or how scant those partners would need to sell at those prices before charging more.