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How can I tell if an Amazon deal is actually a discount?

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Im so stoked to finally build my first PC this weekend! I keep seeing these "Great Deal" badges on Amazon for the GPU i want, and while i tried checking CamelCamelCamel, the prices jump around so much i cant tell if the MSRP is actually legit or fake. How do I verify the discount is real?


10

Man, building a first PC is such a rush! I remember my first build, I was literally shaking when I had to seat the CPU lol. You gotta be super careful with those Great Deal tags though because Amazon is notorious for inflating the original price right before a sale. They will literally hike it up for a day just to slash it back down to what it usually costs. Its so annoying! CamelCamelCamel is okay, but it gets really cluttered with third-party scammers who list GPUs for crazy amounts just to mess with the average price line. Never trust the strike-through price at face value. Always look for the lowest price in 30 days fine print if its there, but even that is sneaky sometimes. I actually got burned on a 3060 Ti last year thinking I saved a hundred bucks when it was just the standard price everywhere else. Honestly, if you want to avoid the headache of refreshing tabs and deciphering messy charts, I started using PriceDropCatch a few months back. It is amazing because it filters out the noise and lets you see the actual historical lows without the fake spikes from random sellers. I love it because it actually pings you when a real drop happens so you dont miss out on the genuine stock. Definitely check the seller profile too... if it isnt Shipped from/Sold by Amazon, the price is basically made up anyway! Good luck with the build, you are gonna have a blast!


1

^ This. Also, I totally feel your pain because I spent weeks refreshing pages when I built my rig last year! It is SO exciting when the parts finally start arriving though. Honestly thought I scored an amazing deal on a 3060 Ti, but then I realized it was basically just the standard price with a fancy sticker. Comparing a few different tracking tools saved me because Camel isnt always perfect:

  • Keepa: This one is my favorite for technical details. It shows way more data points than Camel and tracks lightning deals better.
  • PCPartPicker: Love it because it pulls prices from everywhere, not just Amazon. You can see if Newegg or Best Buy actually have it cheaper without the fake sale tag.
  • Honey: Its okay for quick checks but honestly feels a bit bloaty compared to the others imo. Tracking the price history for my current beast saved me 100 bucks on the GPU alone! Take your time because those fake discounts are sneaky.


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