Would you buy a graphic card that cost $7500?

I would not buy a graphics card which cost $7500. But, if I had a lot of money, or use it for professional gaming where I can earn money from competing in PC game tournaments, or video game streaming, owning a fast video card can be more worth it than spending money on very expensive food, alcohol, and traveling where you only experience them once, and can't re-experience food, alcohol, and traveling without buying them again.
 
Only if I was a very hardcore graphics person, even then it wouldn't justify that.
 
I would not buy a graphics card which cost $7500. But, if I had a lot of money, or use it for professional gaming where I can earn money from competing in PC game tournaments, or video game streaming, owning a fast video card can be more worth it than spending money on very expensive food, alcohol, and traveling where you only experience them once, and can't re-experience food, alcohol, and traveling without buying them again.

Only if I was a very hardcore graphics person, even then it wouldn't justify that.
I think it not just about the cost, it could get out of date in a few years (like many graphic cards do) and even if you were rich it wouldn't be worth it at the end of the day.
 
I think it not just about the cost, it could get out of date in a few years (like many graphic cards do) and even if you were rich it wouldn't be worth it at the end of the day.

If owning a $7500 graphics card makes someone happy like playing an expensive guitar or piano, and they can afford an expensive graphics card, it can be worth it for very rich people who find happiness or a need in owning a fast graphics card.

This $7500 graphics card may become an antique computer part in many years where it maybe worth more money than the original purchase price. Some classic computers like the Apple II, and Commodore 65 are sometimes sold for more than the original selling price in the past because there are antique computer collectors who are willing to pay high prices to own antiques PCs.

Owners of this graphics card can use this graphic card to mine bitcoin, and other cryptocurrencies, or use it for video editing where they may earn back the $7500 value of the video card by mining cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, or creating tons of videos to upload to YouTube, and many other video sharing and streaming sites like Twitch where they can earn many hundreds to thousands of dollars a month from video views, and video sponsorship deals with companies who pay video creators with a lot of subscribers to review their products.
 
If owning a $7500 graphics card makes someone happy like playing an expensive guitar or piano, and they can afford an expensive graphics card, it can be worth it for very rich people who find happiness or a need in owning a fast graphics card.

This $7500 graphics card may become an antique computer part in many years where it maybe worth more money than the original purchase price. Some classic computers like the Apple II, and Commodore 65 are sometimes sold for more than the original selling price in the past because there are antique computer collectors who are willing to pay high prices to own antiques PCs.

Owners of this graphics card can use this graphic card to mine bitcoin, and other cryptocurrencies, or use it for video editing where they may earn back the $7500 value of the video card by mining cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, or creating tons of videos to upload to YouTube, and many other video sharing and streaming sites like Twitch where they can earn many hundreds to thousands of dollars a month from video views, and video sponsorship deals with companies who pay video creators with a lot of subscribers to review their products.
That's all true. However, I feel like you would have to be on Shane Dawson, Swoozie, any Youtube celebrity, etc. to do something like this. As everyone knows, getting subs on Youtube is an uphill battle. Those numbers are scary to me, and I would personally not buy it only because I am not that serious about video games to the extent that I would buy the most expensive graphics card. I would buy it if like others said my net profit was more than my expensive, which would be a good thing for me, in my opinion. At that point, it means you have to be a professional gamer and video editor. If someone is wealthy and they want to buy it, then the world will continue to move. For me, I would still feel duped if I purchase a card at this price and it gets old next year.
 
That's all true. However, I feel like you would have to be on Shane Dawson, Swoozie, any Youtube celebrity, etc. to do something like this. As everyone knows, getting subs on Youtube is an uphill battle. Those numbers are scary to me, and I would personally not buy it only because I am not that serious about video games to the extent that I would buy the most expensive graphics card. I would buy it if like others said my net profit was more than my expensive, which would be a good thing for me, in my opinion. At that point, it means you have to be a professional gamer and video editor. If someone is wealthy and they want to buy it, then the world will continue to move. For me, I would still feel duped if I purchase a card at this price and it gets old next year.

I agree you have to be a more popular video creator to get enough viewers to earn back the $7500 in a shorter amount of time like under a year if you are starting out making videos for money on sites like YouTube, Dailymotion, Vimeo and streaming on Twitch.

It is possible to make back the $7500 if you have a hard working work ethic where you post many new high quality videos on a daily and weekly basis, and keep learning on how to improve your videos. There are some video creators which started out small, and eventually became bigger and more popular because they had a good work ethic, and are dedicated to created quality videos.

There are also less common chances of having one or more of your videos becoming popular because it ranks high on search engines and social networking news feeds on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and Reddit, and celebrities, popular website or many smaller websites like a blog or forum shares your video, TV news, and people use word of mouth to promote your video by sending text messages with a link to your video.

If you live in a bigger city, you maybe able to find enough video editing job postings on Craigslist, Monster, and other job sites where you would eventually earn back the $7500 in a few months if you are good at video editing, and can get new and repeat customers like stores, restaurants, and other businesses which need someone to edit their videos for their business.
 
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And then it ends up getting outdated a year later lmao. No, I wouldn't spend that much since the best Nvidia cards can do the job and more for a fraction of the cost. I won't even touch that thing in fear of breaking it, and having a loss of $7500 instantly on my bank account just because I wanted to run my games at max performance. No thanks.
 
Holy... no. Not only that I can't afford such a graphics card, where the hell would I put it and use it for? I don't have a spaceship.

The actual design of the card reminds me of one of those old car radio's though, haha. The one that you could detach from the car and take out.
I wanted to see it's max power consumption that it's at 250W. I honestly thought it would be much more. My current one only uses like 75W... I guess if I even wanted to run this graphics card, I'd have to switch other things on my computer like the power supply unit.

But yeah, not for me. I'd love to hear from somebody that actually bought it though :p
 
I don't think (or at least I hope) this is meant for gaming. 24GB of dedicated memory is straight up insane for gaming, and no game, even at max settings, could possibly be this demanding.
It looks like a good card for major 3D modelling projects and heavy video editing, though. I'm sure some animation studios will pick it up (well, they're the only ones who can afford it, probably).
 
I don't think (or at least I hope) this is meant for gaming. 24GB of dedicated memory is straight up insane for gaming, and no game, even at max settings, could possibly be this demanding.
It looks like a good card for major 3D modelling projects and heavy video editing, though. I'm sure some animation studios will pick it up (well, they're the only ones who can afford it, probably).
To be honest I don't know of any game that could even max out the card even at 4K. Just Cause 3 could but that game has other issues anyway.
 
I agree you have to be a more popular video creator to get enough viewers to earn back the $7500 in a shorter amount of time like under a year if you are starting out making videos for money on sites like YouTube, Dailymotion, Vimeo and streaming on Twitch.

It is possible to make back the $7500 if you have a hard working work ethic where you post many new high quality videos on a daily and weekly basis, and keep learning on how to improve your videos. There are some video creators which started out small, and eventually became bigger and more popular because they had a good work ethic, and are dedicated to created quality videos.

There are also less common chances of having one or more of your videos becoming popular because it ranks high on search engines and social networking news feeds on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, and Reddit, and celebrities, popular website or many smaller websites like a blog or forum shares your video, TV news, and people use word of mouth to promote your video by sending text messages with a link to your video.

If you live in a bigger city, you maybe able to find enough video editing job postings on Craigslist, Monster, and other job sites where you would eventually earn back the $7500 in a few months if you are good at video editing, and can get new and repeat customers like stores, restaurants, and other businesses which need someone to edit their videos for their business.

If I live in a big city, it would be even more competitive. Honestly, you would have to be really lucky in those aspects. As far as getting your video up on forums and shared on the news, your best bet would be "whoring" (excuse my French) out, because the videos that get shared the most, at least part of them, are videos where the person doesn't care about what they're doing and they come off as funny as a dancing bear. Of course, maybe you could make a motivational video and get it spread over the Internet, who knows. I know in the big city I live near, it'd be pretty tough but if you can do it, go for it.

And then it ends up getting outdated a year later lmao. No, I wouldn't spend that much since the best Nvidia cards can do the job and more for a fraction of the cost. I won't even touch that thing in fear of breaking it, and having a loss of $7500 instantly on my bank account just because I wanted to run my games at max performance. No thanks.

My parents wouldn't have any of it either. Even if I bought it with my own money and broke it, they'd kick me out due to being a shame to the family. I mean, who else would break a $7500 and not be a shame to their family? I'd be scared to even use my computer, let alone touch it, because one false move and a graphics card isn't the only thing I'll lose.
 
If I live in a big city, it would be even more competitive. Honestly, you would have to be really lucky in those aspects. As far as getting your video up on forums and shared on the news, your best bet would be "whoring" (excuse my French) out, because the videos that get shared the most, at least part of them, are videos where the person doesn't care about what they're doing and they come off as funny as a dancing bear. Of course, maybe you could make a motivational video and get it spread over the Internet, who knows. I know in the big city I live near, it'd be pretty tough but if you can do it, go for it.



My parents wouldn't have any of it either. Even if I bought it with my own money and broke it, they'd kick me out due to being a shame to the family. I mean, who else would break a $7500 and not be a shame to their family? I'd be scared to even use my computer, let alone touch it, because one false move and a graphics card isn't the only thing I'll lose.
Yup, you probably won't even try and reach its full potential when playing games out of fear that it overheats and breaks. Sure, you can have a bit of confidence while the warranty lasts (if any), but after the warranty expires, there's nothing to fall back on if the purchase ever breaks, whether is a day from now or 5 years from now. If you spend that much on a PC part, how long is enough until you can say, yup, my money's worth it because it lasted this long.
 
To be honest I don't know of any game that could even max out the card even at 4K. Just Cause 3 could but that game has other issues anyway.
Crysis 3 at full settings would probably still lag </sarcasm>
I guess you could use it to run some unpolished, totally uncompressed Unreal Engine simulations run in real-time with the highest possible level of detail. But I'm having a hard time believing that even this would put it under pressure.
 
If I had so much money in the bank account that I would even seriously consider purchasing a graphics card which costs as much as a decent used car, I'd probably be all over it. I mean why not, because in that scenario it means I have more money than I know what to do with.

At the moment? No I would never even consider such a thing because I have literally no use for such a monster. Maybe if I started doing freelance work for NASA.
 
If I live in a big city, it would be even more competitive. Honestly, you would have to be really lucky in those aspects. As far as getting your video up on forums and shared on the news, your best bet would be "whoring" (excuse my French) out, because the videos that get shared the most, at least part of them, are videos where the person doesn't care about what they're doing and they come off as funny as a dancing bear. Of course, maybe you could make a motivational video and get it spread over the Internet, who knows. I know in the big city I live near, it'd be pretty tough but if you can do it, go for it.

It can be hard to find video editing work jobs in a small towns because there are not that many customers who can afford to hire technical workers like video editors, or don't have a need to hire a video editor because their company does not use video commercials to promote their business, or their business does not use video for making money like animated film companies and TV news.

There are video creators who act normally on video which has useful informative videos like how to repair household items like a door, draw, and make stuff, and they post videos on a daily and weekly basis, and they have enough subscribers where they make enough money to continue making video for fun, or as a job.

I think posting on a daily or weekly basis on a schedule can help you gain and keep more viewers. Sharing your videos on forums, blogs, social networks, and with friends who are interested in the topic you are posting about can help with making your videos more popular instead of just relying on your viewers to share your videos.
 
Absolutely not! For one thing, I don't have the money to be able to purchase such a thing. If had unlimited funds, then it might be different.
 
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