The NVIDIA-based video card market is a bit more splintered than the ATI one, and we still have the older GeForce cards available at street level, and competing at the entry-level and mainstream sectors. Naturally, the GeForce 7 and 8 Series lines receive a greater number of listings, especially as we move to the popular GeForce 7300/7600/7950 and GeForce 8400/8600/8800 levels. NVIDIA gets the same overall coverage as the ATI list, starting at the entry-level GeForce FX, moving to the GeForce 8600 series, and ending with the powerful GeForce 8800 GTS/GTX/Ultra cards. But just like ATI, there are some NVIDIA cards that are becoming increasingly hard to locate, and we continue to adjust our list accordingly.
The NVIDIA chart was not up to the same level as the ATI listings, but there was still a nice range of price drops present and accounted for. Twelve of these reached double digits, including the GeForce 8800 GT 256MB (-$72), GeForce 9800 GX2 1GB (-$40), PNY GeForce 8800 GTS 512MB (-$39), and GeForce 8800 GTS 640MB (-$24) cards. Three NVIDIA-based cards increased by similar amounts, but only one of these really affected the chart - the GeForce 8800 GTX 768MB spiked by $71 this month. The monthly chart trend mirrored the individual results, and the NVIDIA listings posted an aggregate drop of $256 for April.