Newegg bundles $1,460 128GB DDR5 memory kit with $50 Starbucks gift card — 'Drink Coffee while you game!!' retailer says as memory hits RTX 5080 pricing

G.Skill Trident Z5 Neo RGB
(Image credit: G.Skill)

Just as CES 2026 ramps up, we may have arrived at the nadir of the RAM pricing crisis. Two bundles, posted and sold by Newegg itself, offer two G.Skill Trident 128GB DDR5 RAM kits at a staggering price of $1459 (or $1469, if you like RGB), with a measly $50 Starbucks gift card. The Newegg product listings read: "Free Starbucks Gift Card with purchase, Drink Coffee while you game!!", a truly historic low point in the history of PC building. No doubt, you'll likely be using that very same gift card on your way to work, to earn back the dollars spent on this exorbitantly expensive memory.

DRAM pricing has been spiralling since October, and companies may be looking for ways to sweeten the deal, as prices ramp up. Elsewhere in the industry, PC companies have been looking for creative ways to get around things. For example, Gigabyte is launching DDR4-based AM4 motherboards in 2026, almost a decade after the socket officially launched.

Newegg Starbucks Bundle

(Image credit: Newegg)

The G.Skill kit itself costs more than a brand-new RTX 5080 GPU, which is usually the most expensive part of a high-end PC build. But in an era where AI companies are willing to spend big on DRAM ICs, it's consumers who end up paying the price. If the Newegg offer doesn't entice you, that's not entirely surprising.

An IDC report suggests that due to rising memory costs, the PC market could shrink by 9%, under the most pessimistic scenarios. However, it doesn't take a genius to realize that paying such high prices for a bundle with "free" coffee isn't going to win over many customers. PCPartPicker's memory pricing tool also suggests that the average selling price for a 64GB DDR5-6000 RAM kit has skyrocketed to over $800, almost four times higher than September 2025 levels. But that's not to say you can't find any deals entirely, as they still exist, just be prepared to pay over the odds, compared to the prices seen earlier this year.

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Sayem Ahmed
Subscription Editor

Sayem Ahmed is the Subscription Editor at Tom's Hardware. He covers a broad range of deep dives into hardware both new and old, including the CPUs, GPUs, and everything else that uses a semiconductor.

  • Dr3ams
    These price gougers can stuff it. I'll drive my DDR4 machine until the tires fall off.
    Reply
  • ingtar33
    Today, I just picked up an asus b650E - Tuf mb + 9800x3d and 32GB of crucial ddr5 6400 "pro" ram for $650 from microcenter. The ram alone is currently $400 if you can find it for sale anywhere (it's mostly sold out everywhere).

    I really don't care for the motherboard but getting 32gb of ddr5 and a 9800x3d for <650 is an amazing deal in anyone's book. And i knew i would feel like a moron if i didn't get it immediately when i saw the bundle.

    good luck out there everyone. this is going to get much worse before it gets better.
    Reply
  • Crazyy8
    I got a 7800X3D, B650 MOBO, and 32gb of DDR5 6000 is at Micro Center in 2023 for $350, the RAM alone costs $400 now.
    Reply
  • DingusDog
    ingtar33 said:
    Today, I just picked up an asus b650E - Tuf mb + 9800x3d and 32GB of crucial ddr5 6400 "pro" ram for $650 from microcenter. The ram alone is currently $400 if you can find it for sale anywhere (it's mostly sold out everywhere).

    I really don't care for the motherboard but getting 32gb of ddr5 and a 9800x3d for <650 is an amazing deal in anyone's book. And i knew i would feel like a moron if i didn't get it immediately when i saw the bundle.

    good luck out there everyone. this is going to get much worse before it gets better.
    Nice. I've been eyeing that same deal deciding whether or not to make the 4 hour round trip to the nearest microcenter.
    Reply
  • uplink-svk
    Most of the time, I'm the type of guy buying this incomprehensibly expensive stuff. But I'm not buying it anymore. Who else is? I mean I purchased more than 50 mem kits in the past year, and some of them go for 3000 - 4000e now instead of 500e I purchased them for.

    Who's the target audience for the flashy mem kits today? I get that Ai-mongers are purchasing utilitarian mem kits for servers. But Who's dumb enough to buy the flashy low CL high MT CU DiMM kits for these prices?

    When I purchased my current 48GB CU-DiMM 8400MT CL40 kit for ~400 euroshekels, I was already feeling like a total tool, which I definitely and absolutely am. Now it goes for 1000e, or more. Who's buying it nowadays? Some rich people in order to create an artificial demand? Is that where we're today?
    Reply
  • hwertz
    I bought a (used of course) Coffee Lake system (Lenovo Thinkstation wi(h i7-8700 and 32GB RAM, no storage though) for $180 about 2 years ago. Actually 2 my dad has one. The RAM (even used it appears) is now selling for more than that.

    Starbucks gift card? Get the f' out, obviously I'm not buying $1400+ RAM but Id ask for $50 off the price instead, I like coffee but not from there.
    Reply