Buyers remorse Memes

Posts tagged with Buyers remorse

Welcome To 2021 - But This Time, It's The RAM

Welcome To 2021 - But This Time, It's The RAM
Ah yes, the classic "I bought hardware at literally the worst possible time" experience. Crucial (the RAM manufacturer) getting absolutely obliterated while the guy who bought RAM in September 2025 watches in horror. Because nothing says "excellent timing" like purchasing components right before they either drop in price by 60%, get discontinued, or the entire market implodes. The real kicker? You know this person was probably thinking "finally, RAM prices are reasonable" before clicking that buy button. Spoiler alert: they weren't. They never are when you need them.

The More You Buy, The More You Save

The More You Buy, The More You Save
Ah, the classic GPU buyer's trauma in its natural habitat! Just bought that shiny RTX card with 12GB of VRAM? Congratulations, you've activated NVIDIA's trap card! Nothing triggers buyer's remorse quite like watching them announce a better version for the same price exactly 0.4 milliseconds after your purchase clears. It's almost as if Jensen Huang has a surveillance camera pointed at your "Complete Order" button. The GPU market isn't a technology sector - it's a psychological warfare experiment where we're all the lab rats.

It's Going To Be A Free Upgrade LOL

It's Going To Be A Free Upgrade LOL
The GPU upgrade cycle strikes again! On the left, we have the poor souls who panic-sold their RTX 4090 graphics cards before the 5090 launch, sitting in a dark, depressing cave view. Meanwhile, the smug gamer on the right who held onto their 4090 is enjoying a gorgeous sunset vista. Classic case of tech FOMO backfiring. Turns out the "free upgrade" to 5090 was just Nvidia's marketing department playing 4D chess with our wallets again. Those 4090s are still absolute beasts, and now the sellers are stuck with regret and probably a lighter bank account. The circle of GPU life continues: buy expensive card, panic when new one is announced, sell at a loss, repeat until retirement fund is depleted.