Quote from: Garg on January 07, 2021, 05:19:36Why? It's a reason for increasing prices. It's you who should keep the comments about profiteering until tariffs go down and prices stay up beyond a reasonable delay (which is generally a common problem - prices tend to go down much slower then up). I haven't seen Asus making this adjustment for my market. Surely, you don't expect them to pay for US policy out of their own profit margin. It's not like you can get cards "made in USA". You're dependent on imports and you should be glad they haven't doubled their prices to return the favour (of course, that would require a cartel).
Make this comment only when you ensure the prices will be back on track after the increased import tariffs are back to normal.
Quote from: naine on January 07, 2021, 01:18:29Quote from: Scott Burningham on January 06, 2021, 19:49:24
It's sad to see the manufacturers hopping on the scalper bandwagon. What scumbags. Don't buy these cards. Screw these scumbags over. Just say no.
This is 100% not what ASUS is doing. Scalpers exploit supply and demand to artificially maximise profit. ASUS is responding to increased import tariffs. They do not profit from this.
Quote from: Scott Burningham on January 06, 2021, 19:49:24
It's sad to see the manufacturers hopping on the scalper bandwagon. What scumbags. Don't buy these cards. Screw these scumbags over. Just say no.
Quote from: Felipe Muggiati Feldman on January 05, 2021, 17:57:55
The people who had their heart set on a Strict 3080 White Edition won't care about the slight (percentually speaking!) price increase on these cards.
Quotethere is a mention of the white version of the RTX 3070 priced at a whopping US$779.99. That latter graphics card had a launch price of US$499 for the basic design when it was released in October.