It's over, sir, Mr. VRAM. 16GB is enough. Quit. No more. 🚨
A report from Hardware Unboxed revealed that ASUS had released information that NVIDIA was already preparing to stop sending GPU chips for the GeForce RTX 5070 Ti, resulting in the release of the screen card being designated as End of Life or officially terminating production. The currently released card is the last lot only and there will be no further production in the future.
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NVIDIA's largest screen card manufacturer, ASUS, revealed that a chip shortage made it impossible to continue wiring the RTX 5070 Ti and that the company did not have a plan to resume production of the model. The decision was the result of an adjustment to NVIDIA's capacity allocation plan that instead turned to focusing other screen cards.
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The obvious effect is that goods are in short supply and prices are soaring rapidly. In the United States, the MSRP price of the RTX 5070 Ti is usually $730, or about $23,000, but by the end of 2025, the price has risen to $830, or about $26,000, and is likely to continue to rise in early 2026.
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In addition, the 16GB VRAM version of the RTX 5060 Ti is facing the same situation. ASUS has also assigned End of Life status to this model, resulting in a price rise from around $400 or around $13,000 to a range of $460-500 or around $16,000, while the 8GB version will continue to be available, but it is already in short supply.
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On the whole, NVIDIA is reorienting its product line, with the RTX 5080 becoming the main version of the card that comes with 16GB of VRAM, while the regular version of the RTX 5070 is still available, but the volume of goods is getting limited. This change reflects that high VRAM screen cards are becoming scarce and priced higher. This year, who will take off the new screen card, prepare for the shock.
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Source: videocardz













































































