Get a Radeon Vega 64 for $369 ($30 off), or Vega 56 for $300 ($70 off)

Update: Heads up that both of these deals are live again (or still live), and remain good bargains.

Original story: The Radeon VII, AMD's new high-end graphics card, was announced at CES earlier this month. It promises performance on-par with Nvidia's RTX 2080, but it has a price tag to match—$699. If you're after a fast graphics card, maybe for a FreeSync monitor, and the Radeon VII is out of your budget, PowerColor has two of AMD's last-generation flagships on sale: the Vega 56 and 64.

First is the reference design Radeon RX Vega 64, which is $369.00 from Newegg's eBay store. The lowest price the card has ever dropped to is $399, and when it comes to gaming performance, the Vega 64 is roughly on par with a GTX 1070 Ti. It has a core clock of 1247MHz, a boost clock of 1546MHz, and 8GB of HBM2 memory. Going by currently-available information, the Vega 64 is about 30% slower than the Radeon VII, but it's now $330 cheaper.

PowerColor also has its custom triple-fan Vega 56 on sale, down to $299.99 on Newegg's eBay store. The Vega 56 is comparable to a GTX 1070 in performance, and this custom card has a core clock of 1177MHz with a boost clock of 1478MHz. It also has 8GB of HBM2 memory.

You can buy both cards from the links below.

PowerColor Radeon RX Vega 56 8GB | $299.99 ($70 off)Buy at eBay

PowerColor Radeon RX Vega 56 8GB | $299.99 ($70 off)
PowerColor's version of the Vega 56 is currently $70 cheaper most other Vega 56 cards. It's comparable in performance to a GTX 1070. Buy at eBay

PowerColor Radeon RX VEGA 64 8GB | $369.00 ($30 off)Buy at eBay

PowerColor Radeon RX VEGA 64 8GB | $369.00 ($30 off)
This is the lowest price we've ever seen for a Vega 64 graphics card—it normally sits at $400 or higher. This was AMD's flagship card before the Radeon VII was announced. Buy at eBay

Some online stores give us a small cut if you buy something through one of our links. Read our affiliate policy for more info. 

Corbin Davenport

Corbin is a tech journalist, software developer, and longtime PC Gamer freelance writer, currently based in North Carolina. He now focuses on the world of Android as a full-time writer at XDA-Developers. He plays a lot of Planet Coaster and Fallout and hosts a podcast all about forgotten stories from tech history.

TOPICS