News: 2026-01-24
January 24, 2026 ¡ Generated 05:29 AM PT
To: Senior Intelligence Management From: Technical Intelligence Analyst Date: 2026-01-24 Subject: Daily Technical Intelligence Report
Executive Summary
- Linux Ecosystem: DXVK-NVAPI 0.9.1 has been released, integrating NVIDIA R590 driver headers and DLSS overrides; this highlights the ongoing evolution of the Proton/Linux gaming stack, primarily benefiting NVIDIA hardware users on Linux.
- Market Volatility (NVIDIA Partners): Reports indicate significant instability in the NVIDIA AIB channel; Zotac is cancelling pre-orders and raising MSRPs (up to $200+) on RTX 50-series cards, allegedly due to the end of NVIDIAâs launch pricing support and memory shortages.
- Legacy AMD Hardware: The resilience of the RDNA 1 architecture (RX 5700 XT) was highlighted by a significant secondary market discovery, reinforcing the longevity of 7nm AMD silicon for 1080p/1440p gaming.
- DIY/Community: Extreme cooling modifications on previous-gen hardware (RTX 3080) and high-value scam alerts regarding the new RTX 5090 characterize current community discussions.
đ˛ AMD Hardware & Products
[2026-01-24] Shopper walks out with a $4.99 Radeon RX 5700 XT GPU from Goodwill
Source: Tomâs Hardware
Key takeaway relevant to AMD:
- Demonstrates the continued viability of RDNA 1 architecture (Navi) for modern 1080p/1440p gaming workloads in 2026.
- Highlights the serviceability of AMD reference and partner cards, as this unit was restored from a non-functional state via thermal maintenance.
Summary:
- A user acquired a fully functional ASRock Radeon RX 5700 XT for $4.99 at a thrift store.
- The card required thermal maintenance (pad/paste replacement) to restore functionality after being modified by a previous owner.
- The RX 5700 XT remains a benchmark for price-to-performance in the secondary market.
Details:
- Architecture: The card is based on AMDâs first-generation RDNA (Navi) architecture, built on the 7nm process.
- Specs:
- Memory: 8GB GDDR6 on a 256-bit bus.
- Compute: 2,560 Stream Processors, 160 Texture Units, 64 ROPs.
- Original Pricing: Debuted at $399 MSRP (2019).
- Restoration: The unit had been modified with copper cooling blocks by a previous owner. The new user restored it by salvaging thermal pads from an older GPU and applying fresh paste, confirming the silicon was undamaged.
- Market Context: Despite being legacy hardware, the article notes custom models are still tracked at high prices (~$500 in some specific trackers, though likely inflated) due to the ongoing GPU pricing crisis in 2026.
đ¤źââď¸ Market & Competitors
[2026-01-24] DXVK-NVAPI 0.9.1 Released With New Override & Improvements
Source: Phoronix
Key takeaway relevant to AMD:
- While this software targets NVIDIA hardware, it updates the broader Linux gaming ecosystem (Proton/Steam Play).
- The update indicates the progression of driver headers (R590), giving AMD intelligence on NVIDIAâs software release cadence.
Summary:
- DXVK-NVAPI 0.9.1 has been released, serving as the NVIDIA NVAPI implementation for Valveâs Steam Play (Proton).
- This release enables NVIDIA-specific features (DLSS, Reflex, PhysX) for Windows games running on Linux.
Details:
- Header Updates: The release re-bases against NVIDIA R590 driver headers, alongside newer Vulkan and upstream DirectX headers. This suggests the R590 driver branch is imminent or active for developers.
- New Features:
- Added environment variables (
DRS) to override DLSS SR/RR (Super Resolution/Ray Reconstruction) scaling ratios. - Reflex API âfake successâ returns added for DOOM: The Dark Ages to prevent pink tinting when the Vulkan Reflex layer is missing.
- Implemented
NvAPI_D3D1x_Presentto fix startup crashes in Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor.
- Added environment variables (
- Stability: Added function stubs to prevent crashes in Godot engine titles and workarounds for The Last of Us Part 2 (faking GPU query success).
[2026-01-24] Zotac reportedly cancels GPU orders and raises MSRP by $200 or more across the board
Source: Tomâs Hardware
Key takeaway relevant to AMD:
- Competitor pricing instability provides an opening for AMD to compete on value/MSRP consistency.
- Reports of NVIDIA ending âOPP pricing-supportâ schemes suggest a general upward trend in GPU pricing for the 2026 generation.
Summary:
- Zotac is reportedly cancelling pre-existing orders for high-end NVIDIA GPUs and relisting them at significantly higher prices.
- The company cited âsystem errorâ for cancellations, though the move coincides with market-wide price hikes.
Details:
- Price Increases: Reports indicate Zotac RTX 5090 prices jumped by approximately $500, and other MSRPs increased by $200+ across the board.
- Supply Chain Drivers:
- Ongoing memory shortages (GDDR7/GDDR6X) are cited as a primary driver.
- Reports from Germany and Japan indicate strict rationing of GPUs with 16GB+ VRAM.
- Partner Support: Intelligence suggests NVIDIA has ended its âOPP pricing-support scheme,â which previously subsidized AIB partners to hit target MSRPs. Without this, partners are raising prices to maintain margins.
[2026-01-24] $3,000 RTX 5090 delivery brings rocks, a towel, and broken dreams
Source: Tomâs Hardware
Key takeaway relevant to AMD:
- High MSRPs of competitor flagship cards ($3,000+) are creating high-risk secondary markets prone to fraud, potentially deterring consumers from the ultra-high-end segment.
Summary:
- A customer purchasing an MSI Suprim RTX 5090 via Amazon Resale received a box filled with rocks and a towel instead of the GPU.
- This highlights security failures in the âOpen Boxâ return verification process for high-value hardware.
Details:
- Valuation: The specific RTX 5090 SKU is valued at approximately $3,000 in the current 2026 market.
- Modus Operandi: A âweight-matchedâ return fraud where a previous buyer kept the GPU, filled the box with rocks to match the shipping weight, and returned it. Amazon Resale restocked the item without visual verification (LPN label present).
- Frequency: Similar incidents were reported recently involving an RTX 5080 (replaced with a brick), indicating a targeted trend against high-value 50-series cards.
đŹ Reddit & Community
[2026-01-24] 100W car amplifier hacked into a custom RTX 3080 heatsink
Source: Tomâs Hardware
Key takeaway relevant to AMD:
- Highlights user willingness to perform invasive modifications to extend the life of previous-gen hardware rather than upgrade, likely due to high current-gen pricing.
Summary:
- A Reddit user modified an overheating MSI RTX 3080 Ventus by replacing the backplate with a 100W car amplifier chassis acting as a massive passive/active heatsink.
- The mod significantly reduced operating temperatures.
Details:
- Thermal Issues: The stock card was hitting 102°C (Memory) and 105°C (Hotspot). Repadding had failed to provide a long-term fix.
- Modification:
- Heatsink: A cut-down aluminum 100W car amplifier chassis.
- Interface: Arctic MX-7 thermal paste and upgraded thermal pads.
- Active Cooling: Stock fans replaced with three 92mm Thermalright RGB fans.
- Results:
- Hotspot temperatures dropped by 20°C (to ~85°C).
- Memory temperatures stabilized at 96-98°C, with much slower thermal soak times due to the increased thermal mass (approx. 3 lbs of added aluminum).