People woke up to cancelled GPU orders and fatter price tags, because ZOTAC allegedly pulled the same move that already put Corsair in the doghouse.
What set everyone off
What set everyone off
- ZOTAC is being accused of quietly killing some RTX 5090 orders
- Buyers say the cancellations came with a vague system error excuse
- Almost immediately after, prices jumped hard
- RTX 5090 listings on the official ZOTAC store suddenly cost a lot more
- Reports point to jumps in the 20 to 22 percent range
- That works out to roughly five hundred dollars extra, depending on the model
- Corsair recently caught heat for real-time price changes
- Customers there also saw orders vanish before higher prices appeared
- Discounts followed, but they did not match the original prices
- A Reddit thread on r/pcgaming kicked off the discussion
- Screenshots started circulating almost immediately
- Buyers compared notes and realized this was not a one-person problem
- Some users shared emails blaming a system error for cancellations
- Full refunds were promised
- Customers were encouraged to reorder once the issue was resolved
- Orders were placed at prices set by the company itself
- Cancelling after payment feels like rewriting the deal
- The timing of the price hike raised eyebrows
- GeForce RTX 5090 Solid OC
- GeForce RTX 5090 AMP Extreme Infinity
- Both models reportedly showed higher prices in screenshots
- The ZOTAC store is currently under maintenance
- Users claim orders from late night or early morning vanished
- Price changes appeared right after those cancellations
- High DRAM costs are already pushing GPU prices upward
- Shortages make reordering risky
- Paying more after being cancelled feels like punishment
- An official response from ZOTAC
- Clear answers on how many orders were affected
- Confirmation of whether the price hikes are permanent
- Official stores are not automatically safe anymore
- Screenshots and receipts matter
- Rushing GPU purchases right now carries real risk