Gamer scores Nvidia’s $999 powerhouse RTX 5080 for a jaw-dropping $289 — the Walmart clearance aisle is the secret weapon to beat the AI-driven GPU shortage

PNY GeForce RTX 5080 Overclocked Triple Fan
(Image credit: Reddit)

What started as one fortuitous shopper’s success story in securing a graphics card at an amazingly low price has escalated into an all-out bragging contest. Redditors are flooding a viral thread to flaunt the incredible steals they’ve scored on Nvidia's GeForce RTX 50 (codenamed Blackwell) series (codenamed Blackwell), some of the best graphics cards that you can buy at the moment.

The Reddit thread kicks off with what could otherwise have been the steal of the century. The original poster recently purchased a PNY GeForce RTX 5080 Overclocked Triple Fan graphics card for $562.49, 44% below its MSRP. PNY's rendition is one of the very few custom GeForce RTX 5080 models on the market that stuck with Nvidia's $999 MSRP. However, things got out of hand when another Redditor hopped into the discussion and dropped a bombshell on everyone.

Thanks, Walmart from r/pcmasterrace

The common denominator among the Redditors who bought a cheap Blackwell-based graphics card is Walmart's under-the-radar electronics clearance aisle. Even before the graphics card shortage, many buyers were finding GeForce RTX 5090 steals with the characteristic Walmart yellow sticker. The number of lucky shoppers has increased over the last couple of months now that the cat is out of the bag, and more and more people are hunting for clearance sales on computer hardware at their local Walmart stores.

However, not every scavenger hunt has a happy ending. One unlucky Redditor had bought a PNY GeForce RTX 5090 Overclocked Triple Fan graphics card at MSRP, which is rare nowadays given market conditions. Fortunately, the shopper opened the package in the parking lot to verify the purchase, found a GeForce RTX 4080, and immediately returned it to the store.

There's always a risk of purchasing high-value computer hardware at Walmart's clearance area. Sometimes these marked items are online returns where dishonest buyers use the swindler scam, and Walmart doesn't properly verify them. At other times, you may get lucky because markdowns result from damaged packaging or missing contents. It's one of those hit-or-miss situations.

The graphics card market has become an absolute nightmare for consumers over the past couple of months. As you can see from our GPU price tracker, prices continue to soar, and there is limited inventory across all U.S. retailers. It's near impossible to find a graphics card at MSRP, much less good deals on them. Desperate PC builders and upgraders have started looking beyond traditional retail channels and poking around in unorthodox places, such as Walmart clearance areas or thrift stores, which have produced a couple of interesting finds. Sometimes, it's just about being in the right place at the right time.

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Zhiye Liu
News Editor, RAM Reviewer & SSD Technician

Zhiye Liu is a news editor, memory reviewer, and SSD tester at Tom’s Hardware. Although he loves everything that’s hardware, he has a soft spot for CPUs, GPUs, and RAM.