A few people who managed the minor miracle of tracking down a new Nvidia RTX 50-series graphics card were shocked and appalled to find that these GPUs were underperforming thanks to missing Render Output Units (ROPs). But as it turns out, buyers are so desperate for these new cards that at least one European vendor is trying to sell said underperforming defects as “B-stock.”
German online store Alternate.de has a listing up for the Zotac RTX 5090 Solid OC, with its “missing” ROPs spelled out right on the page. (The defective card only has 168 ROPs when it should have 176.) Those missing ROPs can result in up to 10 percent less performance.
The price for this rough diamond? €2,899, or about $3,140 USD. For a card that Nvidia claims has a $2,000 MSRP without defective hardware.

Alternate.de
It’s hard to tell what the current street price is for any of the recently launched Nvidia and AMD cards, but one Newegg listing shows the same Zotac card as $2,370. Out of stock, of course. And VideoCardz.com notes that no, you can’t just use the warranty on the card and get Zotac to replace it with a 5090 that does have all its ROPs intact. The best you can hope for would be a return and refund from the retailer.
It’s pretty depressing that someone is selling a known defective card at well above the price of an unsullied GPU. It’s even more depressing that, in the current marketplace, someone’s probably going to buy it—if not an actual PC gamer willing to pay more for less, then a reseller hoping to make a quick buck, with or without disclosing that this particular 5090 isn’t all it’s cracked up to be.
Войдите, чтобы добавить комментарий
Другие сообщения в этой группе


Microsoft is sending the next annual feature update for Windows 11, v

Smart appliances are great since you can control them from your phone

Does your CPU come with a cooler in the box? Do you need to buy a sep

In previous versions of Microsoft Outlook (the classic app), you coul

If you’ve been waiting for a value-packed laptop to snap up for a gre

OLED monitors aren’t exactly cheap, but Dell subsidiary Alienware def