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RX 9070 XT Early Black Friday deals 2025?

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Hey all,

I’m starting to plan out a new build for early 2025 and I’m really eyeing the RX 9070 XT as the GPU I want to grab. Since Black Friday and all the early sales are usually the best time to buy, I’m trying to figure out if it’s worth waiting specifically for early Black Friday deals in 2025, or if that’s just wishful thinking with a newer high-end card like this.

Right now I’m gaming at 1440p on an older RX 6700 XT, and it’s starting to struggle with newer titles at max settings (Starfield and CP2077 with ray tracing are rough). My plan is to move to a 1440p 240Hz monitor soon, maybe even dabble in 4K later, so the 9070 XT seems like a solid jump. My rough budget for the GPU alone is around $900–$1,000, but I’d obviously love to save a couple hundred if possible.

A few things I’m wondering:
- Have you seen any **early Black Friday** patterns with previous RX 7000/8000 series launches that might apply to the 9070 XT in 2025?
- Do big retailers (Amazon, Newegg, Best Buy, Micro Center, etc.) usually discount new high-end cards that early, or are the deals mostly on older models?
- Is it more realistic to expect maybe a $50–$100 bundle deal (free game, store gift card, or PSU/SSD combo) rather than a big direct price cut?

I don’t *have* to upgrade right now, but if early Black Friday 2025 is likely to bring decent deals, I can hold off and plan my whole build around that window.

For anyone who’s tracked GPU pricing over the last few years, what would you realistically expect for RX 9070 XT early Black Friday deals in 2025: meaningful discounts, minor promos, or basically MSRP only?


8 Answers
5

Summing up the thread, everyone basically agrees that a massive price drop on a 9070 XT for its first Black Friday is wishful thinking. Youre mostly looking at small game bundles or minor $50 cuts on specific AIB models rather than a total price collapse. From a DIY enthusiast perspective tho, I think you can find way better value by being proactive instead of just waiting for a standard retail discount: * **The Open-Box Route:** Skip the holiday rush and watch Best Buy open-box listings a month or two after launch. DIYers often return high-end cards because they dont fit their mid-tower cases or have minor coil whine. Thats where you find the real $100+ discounts.
* **Prep the Ecosystem:** If youre jumping to this tier, make sure your PSU can handle the transient spikes. I'd look for an MSI MPG A1000G PCIE5 or a similar ATX 3.1 unit to keep things stable.
* **Manual Tuning:** Instead of paying a huge premium for a 'factory overclocked' card, buy a closer-to-MSRP model and DIY your undervolt via Adrenalin. Youll usually get better thermals and noise levels than the expensive 'Pro' versions anyway. Tbh, if you handle the technical tuning yourself, you wont need to sweat the holiday sales as much. Just grab it when stock stabilizes tho.


3

TIL! Thanks for sharing





3

I was just looking into this too and honestly, instead of just looking at the price tag, I would be looking at the performance benchmarks and how the drivers are holding up by then. Everyone talks about the cost, but for 1440p 240Hz, you really need that frame time stability or the high refresh rate feels wasted. I think going with Sapphire or maybe PowerColor is usually the way to go for AMD, you basically cant go wrong with their thermal designs. By the time late 2025 rolls around, the drivers will actually be mature enough to hit those high targets consistently. If youre pushing 4K later, you want to see if the real-world benchmarks show any weird stuttering in those newer titles like Starfield or whatever is the big game then. I have noticed that AMD cards usually get a nice performance bump a few months in once the software catches up. So waiting for Black Friday might be less about the fifty bucks you save and more about actually getting a card that works as advertised without the day-one headaches.

  • Check the 1% lows in reviews
  • Look for driver stability reports
  • Stick to the big name AIBs Just get any card from Sapphire and you will probably be happy with the real-world performance.


2

Honestly, if youre aiming for that 1440p 240Hz target, just grab the card whenever you see it in stock at MSRP. GPU prices for brand new high-end tech rarely tank during Black Friday. Ive been really happy with my current setup and found that the real savings come from picking up a high-end power supply like the Corsair RM1000e Fully Modular Low-Noise ATX Power Supply or a killer screen when they go on sale instead. If you really want to maximize performance for that budget, Id put the extra cash into a high-quality AIB model like the Sapphire Nitro+ AMD Radeon RX 7900 XTX 24GB because the cooling and noise levels are totally worth the premium over a reference card. I switched to a Sapphire card last year and have no complaints at all, it just works well and stays quiet even under heavy load in Starfield. Dont sweat a $50 discount too much when youre building a monster rig like that. Getting a monitor like the Samsung Odyssey G7 27-inch 240Hz Curved Gaming Monitor on sale will save you way more money than waiting for a small GPU promo anyway. Basically, just get the parts and start gaming.


0

Hey!

I’d personally *plan* around early Black Friday 2025, but I wouldn’t expect massive RX 9070 XT price cuts, more like small promos and bundles.

I’m kinda in a similar boat: I went from a 6700 XT to a newer high-end card (7900 XTX) last year. I watched prices like crazy from October through Black Friday. What I actually saw:

- New high-end cards (like the XTX) were basically MSRP for a while
- Early Black Friday mainly had **$50-ish cuts** on specific AIB models or **rebates**
- The better “value” was from **game bundles + gift cards** at places like Micro Center and Newegg

AMD tends to do those GPU + game promos instead of big raw price drops early on. I’d *definitely* expect that again for something like a 9070 XT – maybe $50–$100 off a non-reference model + a big new game or store credit.

If you’re okay with your 6700 XT for another year, I’d wait and do your whole build around that window, but mentally assume “near MSRP + nice bundle,” not “$200–$300 off.”

Hope this helps!





0

Hi there, I’d actually plan *less* around early BF 2025 and more around the 3–6 months after the 9070 XT launches.

New top‑tier cards almost never get serious discounts during their first Black Friday. What you usually see (looking at 7900 XTX / RTX 4090 patterns) is:
- **Launch + 3–4 months:** maybe $50–$100 off via AIB promos or slight MSRP realignment
- **Bundles instead of cuts:** game bundles, PSU/SSD combos, or store gift cards worth ~$50–$150 equivalent
- **Real price movement:** only once the tier *above* and *below* it are clear (e.g., 9060/9080 equivalents), or if Nvidia undercuts them and AMD responds

You’re also pushing 1440p 240 Hz, where CPU, frame pacing, and driver stability matter a lot. I’d be conservative and:
1. **Wait for reviews + driver maturity** (2–3 driver cycles), not just sale dates.
2. Watch for **stable street price** first, *then* hope for a small BF promo.
3. Have a backup: if 9070 XT holds MSRP, a discounted 9060‑class or last‑gen high‑end (equiv. to 7900 XTX) might give you 90% of the performance for hundreds less.

So yeah, I’d expect: minor promos and bundles in early BF 2025, not big cuts. Plan your build around performance + stability first, treat any early BF “deal” as a bonus, not the strategy.

Hope this helps!


0

Hey,

Everyone’s covered the money side pretty well, so I’ll throw in the boring-but-important angle: **safety and reliability** if you’re planning a big jump to something like a 9070 XT.

**1) Early BF ≠ best time for stability**
New high‑end cards + early adopter rush + holiday shipping = higher chance of:
- bad factory overclocks, coil whine, or thermal issues slipping through QA
- rushed BIOS revisions
- DOA cards that you only discover *after* return windows get messy with holiday chaos

So yeah, early Black Friday might save you $50–$100 or get you a bundle, but I’d **prioritize a clean, low‑risk build** over squeezing every dollar.

**2) What I’d do (safety‑first plan)**
- Wait a couple months after launch for: driver maturity, firmware fixes, and real thermals/VRM data.
- If you still aim for early BF, buy from a retailer with **rock‑solid RMA** (Micro Center / Best Buy > random Amazon marketplace seller).
- Pair it with a **high‑quality PSU** (80+ Gold/Platinum, reputable brand, enough headroom) and good airflow case. New GPUs can pull nasty transient spikes.

**3) Realistic expectations**
- Early BF 2025: I’d expect **minor promos / bundles**, not huge price cuts on a fresh flagship.
- The real “win” in that window, imo, is getting a **known‑good AIB model** with proven cooling and reliability, not chasing the absolute lowest price.

Given your 6700 XT still works, I’d **wait, watch thermals/driver reports**, then buy once the dust settles — even if that means paying close to MSRP but getting something that runs cool and stable for years. I’m way happier with a rock‑solid card than a $100 “deal” that ends in RMAs.

Hope this helps! 👍


0

Hey,

I’m kinda in the same boat (6700 XT gang 😅), so here’s how I’d look at it from a pure money/value angle.

**Option A – Wait for early Black Friday 2025**
**Pros:** maybe small discount ($50–$100), higher chance of game bundles, lots of store promos.
**Cons:** new high-end card = usually close to MSRP, stock can be weird, you’re basically planning around *hope*.

**Option B – Buy close to launch**
**Pros:** you actually get max use out of that $900–$1,000 (more months of high FPS), best chance to resell your 6700 XT while it’s still worth something.
**Cons:** almost zero discounts, maybe just a launch bundle.

**Option C – Grab a cheaper tier (9060/9050 or last‑gen high-end) on sale**
**Pros:** this is where the *real* Black Friday value usually is. Last‑gen or second‑tier cards can drop $150–$300.
**Cons:** not as “shiny” as 9070 XT, maybe a bit less future-proof for 4K.

If you care about pure value, I’d honestly:
- Set a hard cap (like $900 total *after* tax/rebate).
- Watch price-per-FPS: if a cheaper card is, say, 80–90% of the 9070 XT performance for 60–70% of the price on BF, that’s a fantastic deal.
- Treat bundles (free game / PSU / SSD) as a bonus, not the main reason to wait.

So IMO: expect **minor promos + good bundles** on the 9070 XT for early BF, but **big savings will likely be on slightly lower tiers or previous gen**. If your 6700 XT is still playable, waiting and pouncing on whatever gives the best FPS per dollar around that time is probably the smartest wallet move.

Hope this helps! 🖥️🔥





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