FeelinFroggy Yeah, its not Cryorig or US leadership who is to blame, China is at fault here. This has been a long time coming and honestly, impact thus far has been minimal. I hope Cryorig can survive this trade war as I like their products. But unfortunately, the issues are between trade relations of the US and China are much bigger than Cryorig.

Example: MSI’s NVIDIA RTX Lineup New Pricing After Trump Tariff

RTX 2080 Ti Gaming X Trio: $1231 to $1310

RTX 2080 Ti DUKE 11G OC: $1212 to $1290

RTX 2080 Ti VENTUS 11G OC: $1203 to $1280

RTX 2080 Gaming X Trio: $849 to $900

RTX 2080 DUKE 8G OC: $840 to $890

RTX 2080 VENTUS 8G OC: $830 to $880

Fully assembled consumer electronics have so far been spare

fully assembled PCs have been spared

Minimal ... ? This was for the 10%Here is one of the lists we received with post-tariff pricing going live very soon (if not already):Not going to argue the point regarding Cryorig ... but the US has only themselves to blame for the trade situation with China. Had US companies been willing to pay a fair / living wage all the production facilities wouldn't be in China. The tariffs are an ill advised policy that is severely hurting US companies all by themselves. Let's compare.Companies like Cyberpower build PCs here using US labor. Where possible, they can avoid the tariffs but as most components are made only in China, most of the products costs are effected by the US Tariff. For arguments sake, let's call the cost of components $1200 with 3/4 of that sourced from China and incurring a $225 tariff. Let's call Cyberpower's labor cost $300 using living wage US labor.Now companies like Dell, HP, and all the boxes found in big box stores ... the get put on the shelves in the very same boxes that they left China.. So to sell the same PC with the exact same componentry ... they have a $225 price advantage from the get go. They are using cheap Chine based labor so costs are $100 per unit, another $200 advantage.So how the hell is any of this going to change anything other than companies like Cyberpower will go out of business ? Stop drinking the Kool-Aid ... nothing is going to change for better in the PC market, it's just shifting production from US to China and destroying the US based PC industry.Build a PC in America, pay the tariffs.Build a PC in China ... no tariffs.And all the while, half the folks are walking around believing that China's somehow going to buckle when all that's happening is their US competition is in tatters;on Chinese imports. However, the vendors behind certain computer components such as motherboards, graphics cards, and PC cases, have not been so lucky. Last year, the US began tariffing them at 10 percent before raising the rate to 25 percent in May. ""The tariff list covers a lot of computer parts, including motherboards, graphics cards, CPU coolers and even desktop cases. TVs, digital cameras and internet modems have also been ensnared as well.. ""US companies assembling computers from imported parts face the same problem. Dell, which runs assembly plants in Massachusetts and North Carolina said the tariffs s “could result in serious damage to Dell and its employees,” with the new costs either raising the price of products or coming out of the company’s bottom line.. "The economic damage will be particularly severe for smaller companies. CyberPowerPC, a small LA company specializing in high-end custom computers, pleaded its case to the USTR earlier this month. “These tariffs will increase the cost of all of our products and” the company’s CEO wrote. “In our company’s 20-year history, the proposed Section 301 Tariff Action is the greatest threat to our company’s survivability to ever arise.”John Samborski, CEO of an Illinois-based PC manufacturer focused on education and government contracts, put the tariffs in even harsher terms, saying simply: “This is not the place to discuss tariffs on anything else but PC products but it's clear that all this will do is shift PC assembly / production ***out of the United States to China*** or other 3rd world countries. Wouldn't the smarter thing to do be to place the 25% tariff on the fully assembled PCs and leave the componentry alone ? Would that shift production quickly to the IUS as all one needs is an empty warehouse ? Many components are now made ony in China so it's not as if US companies have alternative sources for those ... FAb plants take 4-5 years to get up and running.A logical approach would be to start with the 25% on fully assembled PCs and then phase in the tariffs on componentry over 5 years... providing an exemption to companies that start building fab plants.