TL;DR Bought a GTX 770 for $90, am happy with it. Learned not to shoot my whole nut at new parts online ALL the time.
I'll preface this by saying, I've had a lot of good luck buying new AND used parts everywhere I shop, as in, I haven't had a card die on me in almost all of 2015 (mostly newegg & Amazon for new stuff).
I was in the market for an Nvidia GPU. I just wanted to play around with DSR and I'd sold my last Nvidia GPU about a week ago. I stumble into this cheap GTX 770 and I start thinking.. Will I be able to justify this purchase to Quizzical, then I think... well hellz yeah. Even considering power consumption the discount pays for itself, unless the thing dies on me, right?
I get to the place, the guy demos the card, it looks great. I take said card home and I now have more coin to spend on other parts or, you know, Christmas.
My point is, it isn't always necessary to bust your entire nut on brand new parts for not that awesome discounts just because there is a discount. Like the recent fellow gamer who lost his 7870 and was looking for a replacement. He was happy with his 7870 until it died, means he could very well have made good use of a deal like this, without having to buy himself an early present.
It's obviously not going to work for everyone but, take a look around your local area, you might find a gem.
Comments
I have nothing against used parts. I usually don't recommend it though, because the part usually (not always, but usually) it outside of warranty, or the warranty does not transfer, or it's nearly impossible to determine the condition of a part.
It's not like a car where you can generally assume if it has XXXXX miles on it what state the car you are considering will be. There's no odometer on computer parts, and with electronics, it's usually an all-or-nothing case, either it works, or it doesn't work at all, and there isn't a lot of in-between.