Unlucky customer buys RTX 5080, receives relabelled RTX 5060 Ti in the box instead — GPU was sold and shipped by Amazon, hinting at return switcheroo

Customer receives relabeled RTX 5060 Ti in lieu of the RTX 5080 they ordered
(Image credit: u/Familiar_Boat_2104 on Reddit)

A new entrant has emerged in the long-running series of GPU scam cases documented on Reddit — this time, it's an RTX 5080 being covertly swapped for an RTX 5060 Ti. An unfortunate customer ordered an RTX 5080 from Amazon, only to be left bewildered by a different GPU inside the box that showed no signs of being a 5080, despite being labeled as such.

Did I get scammed? Just bought an RTX 5080 off of Amazon. from r/buildapc

RTX 5080 stickers on an RTX 5060 Ti

(Image credit: u/Familiar_Boat_2104 on Reddit)

The leading theory in the comments points toward a deceptive swap on the customer's end. Not this customer, but someone else who ordered both an Asus Prime RTX 5060 Ti and 5080, filed for a return on the 5080 but sent the 5060 Ti in the box instead. They guess Amazon didn't bother checking the package contents — even if it did, the mere presence of a GPU would've likely been enough to accept it — and resold the 5080. Our very own Matt Safford scored an i5 CPU for $10 thanks to another such scam last year.

The unlucky buyer on Reddit then became the new recipient of this GPU. The story tracks and, beyond speculating that someone else in the shipping chain was responsible, lines up with previous "comingling" incidents. Another RTX 5080 was swapped for a literal brick, and before that, people have received pasta instead of silicon, too. Usually, scammers don't go to the length to swap stickers between two legitimate SKUs, so at least this one put some effort in.

The 16-pin connector on the RTX 5080 vs. the 8-pin connector on the RTX 5060 Ti

(Image credit: Asus / Future)

At this point, filing for a return/refund on this GPU should get the Redditor their money back, or maybe they can work out an exchange with Amazon's customer service. In times like these, where AI has snatched production lines and GPU prices are on the rise, securing a good deal and watching it slip away can feel extra upsetting, so we hope the victim (and the scammer) gets their due.

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Hassam Nasir
Contributing Writer

Hassam Nasir is a die-hard hardware enthusiast with years of experience as a tech editor and writer, focusing on detailed CPU comparisons and general hardware news. When he’s not working, you’ll find him bending tubes for his ever-evolving custom water-loop gaming rig or benchmarking the latest CPUs and GPUs just for fun.