NVIDIA's GTX 1080 GPU is Quickly Disappearing Previously unaffected by the Ethereum mining boom, NVIDIA's high-end GPU availability continues to dwindle.

PC gaming enthusiasts will one day look back on July of 2017 and say, “There were certainly better times to buy a GPU.” Roughly six weeks have passed since the price of the popular cryptocurrency Ethereum spiked to new heights and threw the gaming GPU market into disarray. While demand on mid-range GPUs from both AMD and NVIDIA has rendered their retail availability practically nonexistent, the high-end enthusiast GPU segment had remained mostly unaffected.

I first covered the Ethereum mining boom’s fallout just last week and mentioned that the dwindling supply of GPUs for PC gamers to buy was mostly limited to mid-range parts. In the short time since that piece was published, many graphics cards featuring NVIDIA’s GTX 1080 GPU have vanished from some online retailers. The few remaining cards still for sale directly from popular retailers NewEgg and Amazon have seen prices increase as much as 20 percent since last week. Pricing on stock available from resellers on those sites can be even higher.

The GTX 1080 launched at a suggested retail price of $599 ($699 for the Founder Edition variants) back in the summer of 2016. It received a price cut to $499 when NVIDIA revealed its ultra high-end GTX 1080 Ti back in February. Since that time, a wide assortment of cards from NVIDIA’s AIB partners have been available with some of the cards selling for as low as $430 up through the middle of June. As of this writing, the cheapest offering from NewEgg is an EVGA custom card for $569. It, along with a different EVGA GTX 1080 at $589, were the only remaining air-cooled cards still available for under $600. Most of the cards listed are out of stock and a few popular models, like the MSI Gaming and ASUS Strix, were absent from the page altogether.

At the previously mentioned GTX 1080 Ti launch, NVIDIA also revealed that a newer revision of its GTX 1060 and GTX 1080 GPUs would soon be available using upgraded memory. Several of these newer edition GTX 1080s have been available for months and were identifiable by their 11Gbps memory spec. 2 of those cards remain for sale on NewEgg, but start at $629 (a price listed as a limited time sale). NVIDIA’s announcement of the upgraded GPUs did not clarify if the original GPUs were to be phased out or if they were meant to exist alongside the new variants.

AMD is expected to announce its long-awaited competitor to the GTX 1080/1080 Ti at the upcoming SIGGRAPH conference in Los Angeles. Before the official reveal, AMD is showing off the new RX Vega GPUs at a few limited engagements across the globe. Unit pricing and the number of RX Vega cards available at launch is still unknown. An influx of new GPUs would be a welcome sight for PC gamers enduring this summer of GPU madness, but there is no guarantee that what AMD has on hand will make things better or worse for the erratic GPU market.

Have you been trying to buy a video card lately? Are you waiting for Vega or for the first regular-priced GPU that comes back in stock? Let us know by clicking below and join the Chatty conversation.