FYI a lot of these GPUs are out of stock at NewEgg. But considering Vega 64s are going for over $700, choosing a GTX 1080 Ti is a no-brainer.
redgarl :
I bought one last week... because the GP104 is crap... point and simple. These GPU drops video signals, are finicky and the drivers at 4k drops. My problem are gone with the GP102. By the way, nothing more than an advertising campaign.
We know redgarl. You are unhappy with Nvidia and are moving on to Vega. We got the memo from you already. Many times.
DookieDraws :
GTX 1060 and 1070 prices are still too high.
That's not going to be changing any time soon either anymore than it will be for the RX 570/580 (and it's the 6GB GTX 1060 being hit, not the weaker 3GB variant). The only good thing about it is that it has pushed many to go ahead and get a GTX 1080 for just a little more. And those are in stock.
zippyzion :
Oh, that is all they cost? I think I have a spare lung here somewhere...I place the TI cards in the "why bother" category. Sure, you'll have great frame rates at high resolution, but they go out of date just as quickly as the upper mid-range cards. As soon as the next DirectX comes out your card is obsolete.... Just get a 1070 or a 1080. Use the money you saved to get more games, or put it towards a VR headset.
1) Have you priced the inferior RX 64? Hint: you can buy a far faster GTX 1080 Ti for the same price and often less.
2) You can't find GTX 1070s in stock, and when you do, they are priced near a GTX 1080.
3) The difference between a GTX 1070-1080 and GTX 1080 Ti can mean quite a bit to those running a 4K monitor or 144Hz 1440p G-sync monitor.
4) I'm still running a 4-year old GTX 680 SLI setup just fine on the latest DX12 games at 1080p and I know several still running a GTX 780 Ti.