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#Evga queue sign up series
10 Series and older receive a reduced amount of points. Points increase with newer and higher-end products in the 30 Series, 20 Series, and 16 Series families.Graphics Card products earn you points based on the GPU model you own.EVGA said that the score is “designed to reward customer loyalty, customer participation, and customer contribution to EVGA and its Community.” Now that value is included, this approach does potentially leave the system open for abuse, as other authorized resellers may not have the means, or desire, to control their own purchasing systems from being exploited. Product purchases must be made at authorized resellers in order to count toward a member score. EVGA ELITE Status – Some products will be available only to EVGA ELITE members.īecoming an EVGA ELITE Member will give you access to sign up for a notification for the first 24 hours after a product is released, subject to EVGA’s discretion.ĮVGA added that “the users with the 300 highest EVGA Scores will be exempt from this requirement for select future launches, beginning with the GeForce RTX 3080 12GB.” Users can sign up for notifications without losing their place in the queue for previous active notifications. 30 Series purchase status – Customers who have purchased a 30 Series product from will be deprioritized in the VGA queue, and will become eligible to purchase their VGA notify product(s) after others in their tier purchase a 30 Series product.*Ĥ. Time/Date of your notification – Date of your notification is used as a tie-breaker between customers with the same EVGA Score.ģ. EVGA Score and Score Tiers – This score signifies the value of your registered EVGA products, EVGA Bucks earned, and Blue Ribbons from participating on the forums.Ģ. The order is made up of the following factors:ġ. This promotes several goals and requests from the EVGA Community, including: Giving greater priority to loyal customers, making more cards available to customers that are hoping to upgrade, yet without closing off the possibility for new customers to obtain a new card. Unfortunately, this could mean that someone who has managed to accumulate a large number of products will take priority over those who have not.ĮVGA Queue 3.0 uses many different factors to establish the queue order. Previously it did have a similar algorithm for calculating the score, but value was not a publicly listed factor. The queue system now calculates member scores by including the value of all products that have been registered. In Queue 3.0, your queue position will be determined first by EVGA Score, then by the date/time of notification sign-up, and lastly by whether the user has already purchased a current series graphics card from. You would think Steve Burke would be that smart, guess not.Image: EVGA Designed to Reward Loyal CustomersĮVGA Queue 3.0 system rewards loyal EVGA customers, while still giving new customers an opportunity to purchase.

This has been an issue every since Intel released their first LGA motherboard in 2006. I've never had an issue with an open box motherboard from Newegg, because I don't buy open box motherboards without being able to inspect them. Open box doesn't mean trash like the mobo in the GN videos. I'm currently on a open box Asus mobo, seller was up front, working GREAT. Open box and damaged misrepresented is two different things. Especially when they left the RMA sticker from the vendor on the mobo before selling as open item. Steve Burke's stupid buying decisions doesn't dictate my buying preferences.Įxcept there is a wider spread issue with Newegg returns. Soon you will have the same issue with AMD's new AM5 motherboards. I don't buy open box Intel motherboards without being able to physically examine them either. I'll buy from Newegg, I've had no issues with Newegg. Drumbic kram36 Drumbic Nobody wants to buy from Newegg right now though.
