AMD RX 7000 Series Graphics Card Deal Days Bargains

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In honor of Amazon’s Deal Days (and who knows, maybe an approaching launch of new kit), AMD has been lowering prices across the board on its Radeon RX 7000 series GPUs by a significant amount. We’ve seen prices falling by hundreds of dollars making them very attractive from a price/performance ratio when compared to the green flavored competition. Let’s dive in and see what’s out there –

Radeon RX 7900 XTX Deals

The Radeon RX 7900 XTX (which we, of course, reviewed) was released nearly two years ago and brought along with it 24GB of VRAM and enough rasterization power to make gaming at 4K competitive with NVIDIA’s offerings (so long as you don’t go nuts with Ray Tracing). It originally landed with a $999 price tag and we’re seeing it falling into the low $800s right now.

Radeon RX 7900 XT Deals

The Radeon RX 7900 XT is a notch down from the XTX by dropping to 20GB of VRAM and shedding some performance, but per our launch review, it will outperform the RTX 4070 Ti rather consistently. Its original launch MSRP was $899, but we’re now seeing pricing in the low $600s which makes this the best bang for the buck you can get right now.

Radeon RX 7800 XT Deals

The Radeon RX 7800 XT joined us about a year ago to help fill in the middle of the RX 7000 series of GPUs and it initially had a MSRP of $499. We found it to be a good value compared to the RTX 4070 when we reviewed it. It also boasts 16GB of VRAM. We’re seeing pricing drop into the low to mid $400s right now –

Radeon RX 7700 XT Deals

The Radeon RX 7700 XT launched at the same time as the RX 7800 XT at a MSRP of $449, which is just $50 below the 7800 XT. In one of our launch reviews, we noted it came out on top of the RTX 4060 Ti consistently during our tests and provided quite a good value. We’re now seeing pricing drop into the mid to upper $300 ballpark, which makes them an easy choice in this price range.

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David Schroth
David is a computer hardware enthusiast that has been tinkering with computer hardware for the past 25 years and writing reviews for more than ten years. He's the Founder and Editor in Chief of The FPS Review.

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