The RTX 3080 20GB was real after all

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The bane of PC Gaming – GPU mining – is drawing to an end. The imminent move of Ethereum to proof of stake and away from energy intensive proof of work means bulk mining GPU purchases have ended. We can see this is reflected in the plummeting prices of new graphics cards and the flood of second-hand sales, including some that were live streamed.

During the peak of the mining boom, it was very difficult to get a new high-end card at a price that didn’t involve some non-essential organ harvesting. Miners on the other hand, had no problem shelling out big bucks for cards in bulk when Ethereum was at its all-time highs, making it easier to recoup their outlay costs.

If you want a card or two, you’d go to a retailer. If you wanted a hundred, try a distributor, but if you wanted a thousand, companies would certainly have been happy to take your call. MSI appears to be one such company. According to pictures posted by @hongxing2020 (via Videocardz), MSI sold unreleased RTX 3080 20GB cards directly to miners.

Back in time, there were rumours that Nvidia was considering selling 20GB RTX 3080’s. It made sense as 10GB feels a bit on the thin side compared to a 16GB RX 6×00 card or the RTX 3090. It turns out the card went far beyond the planning stage and actually made it to production.

Interestingly, the cards were FHR versions, meaning they delivered a better hash rate than the consumer LHR versions. Bad luck for you small time miners who had to deal with the hash rate block on retail 3080’s. Money talks it seems, and if there’s one thing big miners don’t lack, it’s money.

According to @hongxing2020 there are at least 100 available and they’re selling for ‘over 3,000 RMB’ or above US$400. That sounds like a bargain, right? But don’t buy one. Nvidia never released the card so there is no driver support. So, unless you plan to mine for a few more weeks, this card will end up as little more than a novelty collector’s edition.

MSI RTX 3080 20GB graphics card

(Image credit: @hongxing2020/Twitter)
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And even if you could buy one for gaming, it wouldn’t have made sense compared to the RTX 3080 12GB which features more cores and a wider memory bus. That means the 3080 20GB would be a downgrade over a 3080 12GB, and few games make use of more than 12GB of vRAM anyway.

A 3080 20GB would made a good choice for a prosumer working with large data sets, but why would Nvidia sell it in that market when it can push them towards a 3090 with 24GB? So while a 3080 20GB looks good on paper, the card would have been rather pointless when compared to its sibling cards.

The fact that the card exists goes to show just how much market power miners had. At a time when gamers had to pay exorbitant prices for cards, the GPU makers were quietly more than happy to sell to miners behind the scenes. All hail proof of stake!



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