Radeon RX 6600 XTs Available at Micro Center, Hard to Find Elsewhere

RX 6600 XT Launch Day Stock — MicroCenter
(Image credit: Future)

The Radeon RX 6600 XT launch day is here, and availability is both great and terrible, depending on the retailer. Online retailers did not have any RX 6600 XT graphics cards for sale at 9AM EST (the card's release time). The 6600 XT might not be one of the best graphics cards based on specs and performance, and it sits at about the same level as the Radeon RX 5700 XT in our GPU benchmarks hierarchy, but if you can actually find cards in stock, that's better than most other GPUs.

All of Micro Center's brick-and-mortar stores apparently received a relatively large amount of industry. Our GPU reviewer checked out his local store in Denver, where they initially had over 100 RX 6600 XT cards for the launch, with many still available for purchase. It's the largest number of graphics cards Micro Center has received for a launch during the past year, according to some employees.

The Radeon RX 6600 XT is AMD's latest upper-mid-range graphics card packing 2048 cores, 32 CUs, and 8GB of GDDR6 memory at an MSRP of $380. This card is AMD's cheapest RDNA 2 graphics card to date and offers performance that lands between the RTX 3060 12GB and RTX 3060 Ti, depending on the game. In our review, we were concerned the card would sell out just as fast as other Ampere and RDNA 2 GPUs did, but so far that hasn't been the case.

We received information from Rich Carroll, Merchandise manager for Micro Center, who informed us that there were more than 2,000 RX 6600 XT graphics cards available across all of its 25 locations nationwide and that, as of 3:40 PM ET, every store still had stock. We confirmed this by going to a MicroCenter in Denver, Colorado, where dozens of RX 6600 XT cards remained on store shelves, just waiting to be purchased.

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ModelPrice
Asus Dual$499.99
Asus ROG Strix$549.99
Gigabyte Eagle$379.99
Gigabyte Gaming OC$469.99
Gigabyte Gaming OC Pro$499.99
MSI Mech2X$559.99
MSI Gaming X$579.99
PowerColor Fighter$379.99
PowerColor Hellhoud$399.99
PowerColor Red Devil$429.99
Sapphire Pulse$379.99
Sapphire Nitro+$469.99

At the location we checked, oddly, it was mostly the most expensive models that were all sold out. The Asus cards were gone, as were the MSI Gaming X and PowerColor Red Devil. There was only a single Sapphire Nitro+ left, and a few Gigabyte Gaming Pro cards. Meanwhile, there were at least a dozen or more PowerColor Fighter and Hellhound cards, and plenty of Gigabyte Eagle and Gaming cards. We can't speak to availability at other stores, but the cards seem to be moving off store shelves relatively quickly. If you have a local Micro Center near you, it's probably best to start driving as soon as possible.

It's great to see Micro Center getting a healthy complement of RX 6600 XTs on launch day, giving local customers a chance to finally get a graphics card at MSRP. However, the same cannot be said of online retailers. Checking out the Radeon RX 6600 XT on Amazon, Memory Express, and other vendors results in listings either showcasing unavailability with no pricing, or no cards listings at all. Newegg had 15 cards listed, but all were shown as out of stock — they were apparently sold via the Newegg Shuffle.

That leaves the pre-built market (see best gaming PCs) as the only online solution to purchase an RX 6600 XT, with several vendors already marketing RX 6600 XT machines including CyberPowerPC, CLX Gaming, and AVA Direct.

It appears scalpers have not had any luck acquiring the new graphics cards either with eBay.com showing just one listing for a scalped RX 6600 XT at $699.99, with no other listings so far. That will almost certainly change in the coming days, and we're definitely curious to see where pricing lands in our GPU price index.

If you're a European resident, you might have better luck purchasing an RX 6600 XT. ebuyer.com has a couple of Sapphire and MSI RX 6600 XT's in stock right now with prices ranging from €369.99 to €419.99. Other European retailers also have stock.

Unfortunately for U.S. buyers, neither AMD nor its AIB partners seem to have managed to supply online retailers with sufficient quantities of cards. We're not sure if AMD's strategy was to only ship cards in bulk to Micro Center, or perhaps the online stores are just putting the cards into bundles or other ways of limiting purchase. For its part, Micro Center has a policy of only selling one GPU to an individual every 30 days — one of any GPU model, so you can't buy an RX 6600 XT and a GTX 1050 Ti, which was the only other GPU in stock in Denver (at a laughable $299.99).

Hopefully, AMD can continue making enough RX 6600 XT's to reduce Nvidia's domination in the mid-range market. We weren't super excited with a mid-range card that often sells for over $400, but in this market, getting performance roughly on the level of the RTX 2070, and generally ahead of the RTX 3060, is about as good as it gets. Whether prices will remain that low remains to be seen.

Aaron Klotz
Freelance News Writer

Aaron Klotz is a freelance writer for Tom’s Hardware US, covering news topics related to computer hardware such as CPUs, and graphics cards.

  • plateLunch
    You know, with Newegg's Shuffle, you really have no idea what Newegg's inventory is like. They could have 20x what Microcenter got because as an internet retailer, they probably move that much more product. And with their Shuffle, you can't be a miner or a scalper and buy 10 cards with a single click. Maybe exactly what AMD wants?

    I just got selected for a Powercolor. What are the odds if Newegg didn't have inventory?
    Reply
  • lazyabum
    MicroCenter is 40 miles away but my electric car should get there and back.
    Reply
  • JarredWaltonGPU
    plateLunch said:
    You know, with Newegg's Shuffle, you really have no idea what Newegg's inventory is like. They could have 20x what Microcenter got because as an internet retailer, they probably move that much more product. And with their Shuffle, you can't be a miner or a scalper and buy 10 cards with a single click. Maybe exactly what AMD wants?

    I just got selected for a Powercolor. What are the odds if Newegg didn't have inventory?
    I don't know how many of the people on our staff tried for the Shuffle on the RX 6600 XT, but I did and failed to get selected. Matt got selected. So that's 50% hit rate.
    But there were a shload of unpurchased RX 6600 XT cards at the Denver Micro Center when I left!
    I honestly wouldn't be surprised if AMD sent more GPUs to Micro Center than Newegg. MC is doing a far better job at distributing them fairly from what I can tell.
    You have to give your ID, record your address, name, etc. Only one card every 30 days. Newegg is pure luck, and it won't even say how many cards are up for grabs and how many people are entering the Shuffle.
    Reply
  • drivinfast247
    lazyabum said:
    MicroCenter is 40 miles away but my electric car should get there and back.
    Cool story, bro!
    Reply
  • Alvar "Miles" Udell
    MSI Gaming X$579.99
    An entry level discrete graphics card...that costs more than the rest of the system combined...And people are excited over this?
    Reply
  • Kamen Rider Blade
    JarredWaltonGPU said:
    Only one card every 30 days
    I think this should be a required Federal Regulation when GPU's / Video Cards are scarce.

    All Individuals / Business / Entities are limited to 1 GPU/Video Card per (Retail Entity/Vendor) and have a wait time of 2^32 ms

    2^32 ms = 4-Byte un-signed integer ~= 49 Days, 17 hrs, 2 mins, 47 sec(s), & 295 ms.

    That's a bit over 7 weeks of wait time.

    So a large Retailer like MicroCenter or BestBuy would be required to limit purchases across all Physical and online retail stores across the Globe and anywhere they do business.

    This would give individuals a better chance of buying a GPU that they want and not have people flooding and eating up the supply.
    Reply
  • LokkenJP
    Each time I read "mid-range" and prices in the 400-500$ range in the same context, I freak out. 😕

    Seriously, I dont understand how we ("the market") have accepted so willingly those recent outrageous prices. At those price points, GPUs in the segment range of the 6600 XT should be gathering dust in the shelves... instead, here we are, talking about how fast the cards will sell out or how high the price may reach.

    I can understand miners mindset. In the end, they buy in the hopes of recovering their investment and then making some profits, no matter how much they pay. But I cannot understand how gamers have bitten the bait and followed that crazy trend so easily.

    Crazy world this one... :(
    Reply
  • JarredWaltonGPU
    LokkenJP said:
    Each time I read "mid-range" and prices in the 400-500$ range in the same context, I freak out. 😕

    Seriously, I dont understand how we ("the market") have accepted so willingly those recent outrageous prices. At those price points, GPUs in the segment range of the 6600 XT should be gathering dust in the shelves... instead, here we are, talking about how fast the cards will sell out or how high the price may reach.

    I can understand miners mindset. In the end, they buy in the hopes of recovering their investment and then making some profits, no matter how much they pay. But I cannot understand how gamers have bitten the bait and followed that crazy trend so easily.

    Crazy world this one... :(
    I've said this is a mid-range card with bottom-of-the-high-end starting prices. I generally think of mid-range as $225-$350 preferably under $300), and budget as under $200, with high-end starting at $375 and going up to around $600. Everything above that is "extreme" or "enthusiast" or whatever you want to call it. Actually, anything over $1,000 is "stupidly expensive and you really shouldn't buy this unless you're a professional satisfying a specific need." But people get desperate and sometimes overspend in a market like we have right now, where supply is much, much less than demand.
    Reply
  • daworstplaya
    "... relatively large amount of industry ", I'm assuming you mean "inventory".

    I just want to know who is buying up all these GPUs. All my gamer friends that are usually the 1st to buy GPUs have been waiting patiently .... so we know GPU production has been the highest it's ever been. If cryptominers supposedly took 25% of all GPUs and scalpers hit most online stores. Where did all this extra demand come from? We know non-enthusiasts won't wait in line for GPUs and if the enthusiasts are waiting in line and not getting anything .... it makes me wonder.
    Reply