SwanBitcoin445X250

Get Them While You Can Gamers, Graphics Cards Prices Have Crashed

As the exchange rates for all cryptocurrencies declined this year, so did the attraction of GPU mining using graphics cards. As a result, the prices of cards that can be used for both gaming and mining have been cut drastically and leveled off, bringing them back into more affordable territory.   

Also Read: Censorship of Cryptocurrency Discussions on Reddit Gets Kafkaesque

Bargain Bin

Gone are the days of graphics cards being snatched up in bulk at premium prices far higher than the manufacturer’s suggested retail price. The cost of a new card is now tens of percentages lower than they were at their peak just a few months go, and some can even be found at below the listed price.

Looking at the real-time average price charts for representative dual-use cards on trackers like pcpartpicker, we can see that the spikes of the beginning of the year have been almost completely eroded, and prices are now very close to their levels before the craze. For example, the average price of Geforce GTX 1070 Ti went from around $900 at its height to just about $550 today. And if you go looking for bargains you can even find some cards that have dropped by over 50%.

Get Them While You Can Gamers, Graphics Cards Prices Have CrashedGeForce GTX 1070 Ti (Average price in USD) pcpartpicker.com

Manufacturers’ Fears Materialized

While gamers might enjoy seeing miners finally stopping to crowd them out of the market, this must look totally different for GPU manufacturers and their shareholders. Although the major companies repeatedly tried to reassure their traditional gaming customers that they remain their main focus, even going as far as asking retailers to limit the number of graphics cards they sell to miners, hardware manufacturers were riding high on the crypto wave.

According

Read more from our friends at Bitcoin.com: