Amazon India lightning deals

Where on the website is this linked?
1. Firefox DOM inspector to find the <promo-code>.

2. Link should be: https://www.amazon.in/promotion/psp/<promo-code>.

FYI, this also works for a few other such offers that I tested it on - should likely work on all such offers.

te_amz_offerdom_01.png
 
Not sure how you missed it, but there's definitely a Ajax/XHR request that is initiated when you click the "Here's how" element - with the URL that contains the code.

There are times like these where I wished I studied something other than medicine. Thanks a lot for the heads up!

.

This promotion appears to be on the sale price instead of the original price.

Taking a Phanteks Eclipse P500 as an example https://www.amazon.in/gp/product/B088T3VMKK/

Current list price is 15487 so 5% discount is Rs 774.35

Adding two to cart, confirms this:

Screen Shot 2022-08-07 at 12.17.59 PM.png


1548.70/2 is 774.35

But bumping it up to three changes the discount to 3252.27:

Screen Shot 2022-08-07 at 12.20.50 PM.png


Which is 1084.09 per item, or 7% as the offer for yesterday. It stays at 7% for quantities more than 3 as well.

So the earlier "Add 3 items for 7% off" is still in effect, just not on list price but sale price, and it's not advertised anywhere.
 
Amazon hasn't really taken pains to hide this - good on them.
I don't think they are trying to hide. In the app, if you select the offer you can easily navigate to the eligible product category and have a search function. But they don't give that option in the desktop.
 
There are times like these where I wished I studied something other than medicine. Thanks a lot for the heads up!

.

This promotion appears to be on the sale price instead of the original price.

Taking a Phanteks Eclipse P500 as an example https://www.amazon.in/gp/product/B088T3VMKK/

Current list price is 15487 so 5% discount is Rs 774.35

Adding two to cart, confirms this:

View attachment 142124

1548.70/2 is 774.35

But bumping it up to three changes the discount to 3252.27:

View attachment 142125

Which is 1084.09 per item, or 7% as the offer for yesterday. It stays at 7% for quantities more than 3 as well.

So the earlier "Add 3 items for 7% off" is still in effect, just not on list price but sale price, and it's not advertised anywhere.
There are times like these where I wished I studied something other than medicine. Thanks a lot for the heads up!

.

This promotion appears to be on the sale price instead of the original price.

Taking a Phanteks Eclipse P500 as an example https://www.amazon.in/gp/product/B088T3VMKK/

Current list price is 15487 so 5% discount is Rs 774.35

Adding two to cart, confirms this:

View attachment 142124

1548.70/2 is 774.35

But bumping it up to three changes the discount to 3252.27:

View attachment 142125

Which is 1084.09 per item, or 7% as the offer for yesterday. It stays at 7% for quantities more than 3 as well.

So the earlier "Add 3 items for 7% off" is still in effect, just not on list price but sale price, and it's not advertised anywhere.
A very astute observation indeed
 
The RX6600 (8GB) is available at 29.3k

Folks, is this card worth getting over a RX480 which I have for 1080p gaming?
yeah this would be a major improvement over rx 480 polaris architecture is ancient RDNA 2 is miles ahead this should suffice for 1080 gaming in most games , you might need to lower the details in some to hit constant 60 FPS but in most titles you should get decent frame rates, go for it if you were planning to upgrade
 
The RX6600 (8GB) is available at 29.3k

Folks, is this card worth getting over a RX480 which I have for 1080p gaming?
absolutely, rx6600 is the best price/performance in the market for 1080p gaming right now, don't know if it's the lowest price in the market right now, you will probably need a PSU upgrade as well.
 
more than enough for rx 6600 its really power efficient at 140 watts , i have a friend who is running rtx 3080 with a seasonic 750 watt psu it works just fine , you have more than enough headroom for even beefier gpu
How do you exactly calculate how much watt should your psu be to support all the components?
 
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