• out of stock

Galax GeForce RTX 4090 Graphics Card $2,669 + Delivery + Surcharge @ MSY

120

Good price on a 4090 although these are still pretty damn expensive.

Delivery looks to be $10. Or $15 with express post

Price tracker https://www.pgrid.com.au/gpus/geforce-rtx-4090

Surcharges: 0% Direct Deposit, 0.9% card, 1% fee on all other payments.

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Comments

  • -2

    almost a $250 card fee wtf

    • +17

      do you even math bro

      • -2

        it works for trump and vance just pulling bs from their arses …

        • +6

          Give it a rest.

      • +1

        or meth?

  • +2

    You mean $25?

    • I think he/she may have mistakenly thought that the credit card surcharge was around 10% but it's normally around 2.5 to 3.5%.

      • 0.9% card fee was in the title though so that would just change it from "math is hard" to "reading is hard"

        Galax GeForce RTX 4090 Graphics Card $2,669 + Shipping + 0.9% Card Fee @ MSY

        • Oh yeah I didn't see that. That"s a merchant card processing fee.

  • +20

    Rumours starting to swirl that NVIDIA may still launch the 50 series this year and have been keeping things under wraps for as long as possible.

    Even without that, this is barely below MSRP with ~2.5 months until a massive upgrade in the 5090. Nope.

    • +4

      I've heard January (multiple sources from in the industry)

      • +2

        That's what everyone's been saying, yup. Maybe NVIDIA want to launch the Founders Edition early with months of pre-sales, maybe we're just getting a technology preview to impress shareholders.

        All I know is the best leaker is suddenly talking about something being greenlit, and while I originally thought that was for vBIOS on the way to a CES launch, he's simultaneously deleted all reference to comments that he believes they will launch at CES.

        Make of that what you will.

    • +2

      sounds like they may do a reveal but hold back on specs until Jan? all speculation and rumour of course.

      agree with the key message tho re 5090 (but for how much!!!). these 40 series cards should get cheaper, but nvidia will probs choke 50 series supply to clear the 40s for as much $ as possible. see nvidia just overtook apple as the richest company or something?

      • We're in the midst of the 40 series supply being choked, and I'd lost hope we'd see anything this year. 4090 is EoL, 4080 would be close.

        • yeh pushing everyone to spend $$ on whats very likely to be a more expensive 50 series…..

          • @gazer: I only think the 5090 will be more expensive, and that's an AI hobbyist card. If you're a gamer looking to push past 4090 levels of performance, wait for the refresh.

    • "massive upgrade"
      how do you know

      • +1

        It's not like there's an international kabal to keep a raft of multinational corporations from leaking basic info.

        GB202 is 192 SMs, 5090 is expected to have 168 enabled on a 512-bit bus with 32 GB of GDDR7 VRAM. This is well circulated and confirmed through many sources to a standard that high-quality journalists would tick off.

        It represents a 60-70% performance lift over the 4090.

    • 5090/5080 to launch Q1 2025 with the 50 series announcement at CES.
      5090 MSRP is expected to be $2500usd, so expect circa 5k aud from local retailers.

      5090 expected to be a significant uplift in performance and will also have 32gb vram.
      5080 to give 4090 performance +10%

      • Please read the existing comments.

      • I believe the 5080 should be around the 4090D mark to get around American AI export bans to China. So probably 4090-10%. Would make much better sense to just market a 5080 as the top tier card over there rather than making another "D" version and anything above the 4090 will be banned from export.

      • its hard to see how 5080 will be faster than 4090 based on leak currently.
        It has a lot less core. Only thing it has is faster RAM.

        I am sure NV will "select the benchmark" in such way (with DLSS4) to make 5080 looks faster.

        But overall it should be slower than 4090.

        Price wise, I am guessing it will be lower than currently 4090 as well. So like 2k ish, 4090 2.5k. 5090 3.5K+

    • -1

      AMD needs to step up their game to put pressue on Nvidia. They did it with CPUs (9800X3D ftw), they can do it with GPUs.

      • AMD will put direct pressure on the 5080 and below, particularly against the 5060 and 5070. Intel will do similar.

      • AMD have already confirmed they will only be doing mid range gpus next gen.

        • Really? RIP video card market

  • +2

    thanks for the intro to pgrid - didnt know about that site!

  • +6

    Man the prices on these cards have barely moved its insane….stupid to buy one now though unless second hand even then just wait a few more months hopefully

  • +1

    Good deal, prob looking at $1000+ more for 5090, but also allegedly a big upgrade. 32GB Ram for those into AI will be handy.

  • do you think 5090 will be under $3000?

    • No, but it will be better value for money than this. It's the 5080 that will drag down the 4090 pricing.

      • sounds like from early rumours they're gunna nerf the initial 5080 VRAM to make space for a Ti/Super/whatever

        • No, the 3GB chips were coming later. The alternative would have been to make a 32GB 5080.

    • -1

      5090 expected msrp 2500usd so around 5k aud from local retailers.

      • Brutal. Just brutal

  • +2

    I'll grab it if someone gives me $2.5k

  • +5

    5090 32GB will be easily $4000+ AUD with ASUS pushing for a $5K Strix

    RTX 6000 Ada 48GB is still $11K so there is plenty of room for NV to jack up prices on consumer cards

    With AMD and Intel not even trying at the high end, NV can go full Apple for Blackwell

  • Odds on, the 5090 is probably going to be 2k USD, which will work out to 4k aud for cheapest model. (as for some reason it always works out as a 2x usd/aud price increase for gpus instead of 1.5x for cpu's/everything else). Price will drop to 3.6aud within a few months, but it will never get to 4090 priceband levels.

    5080 is probably going to be 1.4-1/5k USD, or 2800 aud for cheapest model. Price will drop to 2000+ aud, but will take several months. It will probably have 16gb ram. With similar performance to a 4090, but with slightly better power consumption figures.

    Is it worth getting a 16gb at that price? No. But we all know nvidia is gonna nvidia… And we probably won't get another 24gb card until a 5080 super/ti version (obv 5090 will prob have 32).

    If you can afford a 5090 at any price, this is all moot. But if you can only afford 3k for a card, the best price your going to get on a card with 24gb for the next 1.5 years, is going to be a 4090 now for this kind of price.

    • That's not how currency exchange and Australian logistics work, so your AUD figures are way too high.

      Your 5080 US MSRP estimate is silly given the process technology in play. The whole point of the 5080 numbers is to keep the card economical for consumers.

      GB203 and GB202 will have refreshes that offer affordable 24GB VRAM (or higher) options.

      • +3

        4090 launch price was 1599 usd for founders card (they do exclude sales tax in their rrp). In aus the cheapest card you could get was $3200 at launch, with the most expensive being $4000.

        4080 founders card launch price was 1199 usd. In aus, the cheapest card you could get was $2300 at launch.

        Yes prices came down quickly, more so for the 4080.

        But on launch day, you could basically take the usd rrp and double it, and get an approximate aud price.

        This doesn't apply to cpu's (for example), which use pretty close to the usd/aud exchange rate. e.g. 7800x3d was 450 rrp, and was 750 aud on launch. The 9800x3d being available later today, is 480 usd, and should come in at 800aud (thou I expect some retailers to push this up to 850 possibly).

        It's just the way it is for high end gpu's on launch, that they unusually don't follow the (around) 1.5x exchange rate, and it's usually due to limited card supply allowing suppliers to price the cards higher than what the msrp actually is, to rake in a higher initial profit, from the limited amount of initial supply.

        They eventually settle to their msrp. But on launch, they are never their msrp.

        Cpu's however have a large supply on launch usually, don't sell out within hours, and so have most retailers don't price them higher.

        (edited)

        • Founders cards weren't sold here, and I don't think we got any MSRP 4090s here, plus the exchange rate was about 7% higher at the time.

          They won't repeat the same launch mistake with the 5080, as evidenced with the 4080 Super.

  • HODL for 5080 ti

  • +1

    Jaysus. Cost more than my first car. And I know what got me laid. Neither.

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