GPU tourism is a thing: Japan blocks RTX 5090 and 5080 sales to tourists amid global GPU chaos

Daniel Sims

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Staff
Cutting corners: Users on China's Weibo platform are reporting that Japanese PC retailers are blocking the sale of graphics cards to tourists. These new policies may be a response to international scalpers, as Nvidia's RTX 5090 and 5080 remain critically scarce. Initially, retailers attempted to deter scalpers by withholding tax-free benefits, but with GPUs selling well above MSRP in markets like China, there still appears to be enough incentive for buyers to fly in, purchase a GPU, and resell it later.

Even four months after launch, Nvidia's latest high-end graphics cards remain difficult to acquire, especially at MSRP. Low stock made Japan's GPU market chaotic from the start, but retailers there have started restricting exports to maintain supply for domestic customers.

A photo taken at a hardware store in Osaka's Nipponbashi district shows a sign in Chinese warning that the RTX 5090 and 5080 will not be sold for use outside the country. The retailer likely aims to dissuade foreign customers from reselling the GPUs in China, where flagship cards are not officially available.

According to Sina Finance, Japanese stores initially tried to curb tax-free purchases, hoping to reduce the profitability of high-end GPUs for scalpers. However, prices for Nvidia's RTX 50 series may be so inflated that taxes alone are not a sufficient deterrent.

In March, a Micro Center in Dallas almost instantly sold out its stock of 5090 cards despite an 85 percent markup. It's unclear how Japanese retailers plan to ensure that GPUs they sell remain in the country, especially since local residents could simply pass the cards along to tourists.

Initial launch stock for the RTX 5090 and 5080 was so low that some accused Nvidia of staging a paper launch. Retailers in several countries reported receiving fewer than 100 units – and in some cases, fewer than 10 – causing customers to resort to extreme measures.

In the US, many prospective customers camped in front of Micro Center locations. When a PC Koubou in Japan held a lottery for the opportunity to buy a GPU, some people climbed a fence at an adjacent kindergarten and destroyed a sign.

The lukewarm critical reception to the RTX 50 series makes the ongoing hype even more surprising. Our reviews of the RTX 5090 and 5080 described them as disappointing upgrades over the RTX 40 lineups. Mid-range models like the RTX 5070 and the 8GB variant of the 5060 Ti, while likely more widely available, offer even fewer improvements over their predecessors.

Nvidia is expected to launch the mainstream RTX 5060 on May 19. At $300, it will likely become the lineup's most popular GPU, despite its unacceptably small 8GB VRAM pool. AMD's 16GB Radeon RX 9060 XT is reportedly set to debut the following day.

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Cheap/casual gaming PCs are effectively dead at this point.

Even shopping for cards on eBay, people want $300+ for their 5 year old 3060s and ****.

Going to ride my $415 used 6800xt like a rented mule till I can get ~2x the performance (~4090) for the same price...
 
Makes one wonder how a +$ Trillion dollar company can get away with such an abysmal product and still retain market share. If the last 10 years or so were any indication, it’s that Mass Psychosis Formation is a VERY real thing indeed.

People have stopped thinking rationally. It used to be said that the cure for high prices, was high prices. Apparently public stupidity trumps markups, inflation, and scalpers.
 
I suspect the export restrictions have more to do with these changes than availability, as evidenced by the rules seemingly targeting Chinese tourists. But, whether these are stores unilaterally making these decisions or if they are responding to government pressure to do so, I do not know.
 
Makes one wonder how a +$ Trillion dollar company can get away with such an abysmal product and still retain market share.

I think you already know, but I'll say it in case others don't. People are stupid and keep paying the asking prices. Until people stop buying, Nvidia has only even greater incentives to reduce stock of gaming cards and jack up prices by an order of magnitude.
 
I am 100% sure if I went to Japan and wanted a 5090 I could find someone to sell me one. Hell I remember I was in the duty shop and one international airport and there were GPUs in the duty free shop.
 
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