Intel Core Ultra 7 265K CPU is already being sold on eBay, but whatever you do, donā€™t be tempted by any ā€˜bargainsā€™ ā€“ youā€™ll likely regret it

by Pelican Press
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Intel Core Ultra 7 265K CPU is already being sold on eBay, but whatever you do, donā€™t be tempted by any ā€˜bargainsā€™ ā€“ youā€™ll likely regret it

Intelā€™s Arrow Lake desktop processors go on sale later today, officially at any rate ā€“ but the CPUs are already available to buy, though we most certainly wouldnā€™t recommend doing so.

VideoCardz spotted that someone on eBay in the UK is selling the Core Ultra 7 265K (which is the Core i7 equivalent, for those still not used to Intelā€™s new naming scheme). Itā€™s exorbitantly priced at Ā£450, although the ability to make an offer is present ā€“ and given that the retail price in the UK for the 265K is Ā£380, youā€™d be pretty daft to pay a Ā£70 premium at this point.

In the US, the Core Ultra 7 265K is also up on eBay with a couple of listings, though unlike the UK, these chips are just supplied in a plastic clamshell (the UK listing is at least the full boxed product).

That said, one of the US listings is at $340, so itā€™s at least cheaper than the $410 we can see the Core Ultra 7 265K is priced at Newegg. Officially, itā€™s still on pre-order at US (and UK) retailers, but that will change later today Thursday October 24, when the ā€˜goā€™ button is hit to make sales live.

Whatever you do, donā€™t buy these chips (or any others listed prerelease in this manner) ā€“ even when one may appear to be a bit of a bargain.

A sad PC Gamer sat at their desk looking unhappy

(Image credit: ShutterStock)

Analysis: Steer well clear

As noted, these Core Ultra 7 265K processors are mostly at silly high prices anyway, although one might tempt you with that $340 asking price which is a fair bit less than you can get it at an official retailer. But note that the eBayer in question only has a couple of bits of feedback, and so youā€™re buying from a completely unknown source, as opposed to a proper retail channel where youā€™ll get full support and aftersales backup.

Even if the chip you buy on eBay does turn out to work, who knows whether itā€™s older sample silicon that might have been put through the mill in some way, and so could more likely manifest problems in the longer run. Issues you doubtless wonā€™t be covered for in any way, shape or form.

And thatā€™s not even considering that it isnā€™t, of course, even legal to be selling these chips in this way.

At this point, the temptation to get a next-gen chip early is pretty meaningless anyway ā€“ the full retail release is literally about to come about later on today. Just donā€™t let any low pricing fool you, either. And besides, youā€™ll need a compatible motherboard ā€“ Arrow Lake uses an entirely new CPU socket ā€“ and these listings are not offering that rather vital piece of hardware to go with the processor anyway.

In short, donā€™t waste your time ā€“ or money ā€“ in case you were in any doubt.

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