Amazon Netherlands Scammed Ordered a RTX 5090 $3,000 – They Sent Rice & Pasta Instead

The Day My Graphics Card Became Groceries

It started as an exciting milestone – after months of saving, I was finally ready to purchase the powerful RTX 5090 graphics card for my high-end gaming setup. What arrived instead was perhaps the most bizarre package I’ve ever received from Amazon.

Amazon Netherlands Scammed Ordered a RTX 5090 $3,000 - They Sent Rice & Pasta Instead
Amazon Netherlands Scammed Ordered a RTX 5090 $3,000 – They Sent Rice & Pasta Instead

From Excitement to Disbelief

The warning signs began with the shipping. My order from Amazon Netherlands, which should have been straightforward, took an unusually long route from Spain with multiple unexplained delays. When the battered box finally arrived, my heart sank the moment I saw the damaged seals.

Inside, where my $2,000 GPU should have been, sat:

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  • Several bags of uncooked rice and pasta
  • A mystery graphics card so old I couldn’t even identify it
  • No documentation or protective packaging
I made the wonderful mistake of ordering a 5090 from Amazon Netherlands…
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Amazon’s Frustrating Runaround

Contacting Amazon support only deepened the nightmare. Their response followed a now-familiar pattern many scam victims experience:

First came the request for photographs – multiple angles of the fraudulent contents. Then came the demand to return the incorrect items for “inspection.” All while my $2,000 remained in limbo, and my dream gaming setup sat incomplete.

Amazon Netherlands Scammed Ordered a RTX 5090 $3,000 - They Sent Rice & Pasta Instead
Amazon Netherlands Scammed Ordered a RTX 5090 $3,000 – They Sent Rice & Pasta Instead

A Growing Problem for Tech Buyers

My experience isn’t isolated. Across forums and social media, similar stories are emerging:

  • High-value electronics being swapped during shipping
  • Warehouse workers exploiting return system loopholes
  • Sophisticated resealing of tampered boxes

The most vulnerable targets seem to be PC components – GPUs, CPUs, and SSDs – where small, high-value items can be easily substituted.


How to Protect Yourself

After this ordeal, I’ve learned several crucial lessons for online tech purchases:

  1. Always film your unboxing – Start recording before opening the package
  2. Inspect seals immediately – Look for any signs of tampering
  3. Research seller history – Even on Amazon, check third-party seller reviews
  4. Consider local pickup – For very expensive items, in-store collection may be safer

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The Waiting Game Continues

As I write this, Amazon still hasn’t resolved my case. The uncertainty has been stressful – $2,000 is no small amount to have tied up in limbo. My story serves as both a cautionary tale and a call for better protections against these increasingly sophisticated scams.

For now, my gaming dreams remain on hold, replaced by a pantry’s worth of rice and a lesson about trust in online shopping.

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