PS5, RTX 3070, and RTX 3080 pop up in Newegg Shuffle - Technology News

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PS5, RTX 3070, and RTX 3080 pop up in Newegg Shuffle

Update: This Shuffle is over, but check back during the week for more offerings from Newegg.

Newegg nearly snuck a Shuffle past us on March 23 by running it in a smaller window from 1pm to 3pm EDT, but you still have time to enter your name for a chance to pick up a PS5 bundle, RTX 3070, and RTX 3080 graphics cards.

The standard PS5 bundle makes a reappearance in this Shuffle, which includes The Nioh Collection, Spiderman Miles Morales, and Demon's Souls, for $779.

There are two RTX 3070 cards for sale as well, one from Asus and one from EVGA. The EVGA RTX 3070 comes with two options, the card itself for $699 and bundled with an EVGA Supernova 750W power supply for $819. The Asus Rog Strix RTX 3070 also comes alone and as a bundle, with the card costing $799 and bundled with an Asus Tuf Gaming B550-Plus ATX AMD motherboard for $959.

The RTX 3080 makes an appearance, finally, in the form of a Gigabyte Vision OC 10GD RTX 3080, though it is only available bundled with a Gigabyte 850W ATX 12V power supply for $1,227 or a Gigabyte X570 Aorus Master ATX AMD motherboard for $1,444.

How to throw your hat in the ring during Newegg Shuffle drawings

The way Newegg Shuffle works is you sign up for a Newegg account and during the event window, you select the items you want and simply click the button marked "Enter the Shuffle." 

When the event window closes, in about an hour, winning accounts will be drawn from the list for each item and the winners notified at the email associated with the account. 

About 90 minutes after notifications go out, winners will have a roughly four-and-a-half-hour window to follow the link in the email to a secure checkout on Newegg and complete their purchase. If the winners do not complete their purchase in the allotted time, they lose their chance to purchase their item and have to wait until it comes up again in another shuffle and try again.

It definitely isn't a perfect system, but it's better than the wild west shoot-out with bots, profiteers, and Ethereum miners that existed before.



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