By Staff Reporter (staff@latinospost.com) | First Posted: Dec 09, 2013 11:28 PM EST

Microsoft's "12 Days of Deals" started December 9, and retail locations and online stores are set to surprise customers with sweet deals for the holiday season.

The promotional sale began with the Dell Venue 8 Pro Tablet with Windows 8.1 OS for the low price of only $199 ($99 for the first 20 customers), which sold out almost immediately.

However, Slickdeals.net posted on their site a scanned document that showed each deal for each day of the 12-day promotional duration, including the doorbuster savings the first 20 earlybirds to show up at the store will receive. The non-doorbuster sale, on the other hand, is available until supplies last.

The complete list is posted on neowin.net  and the deals include the following:

  • Dec 09 - Dell Venue 8 Pro Tablet - $99 for doorbuster, $199 for non-doorbuster
  • Dec 10 - Garmin Fitness Watch + $25 Gift card - $99.99 for doorbuster, $129.99 for non-doorbuster
  • Dec 11 - AT&T Nokia 1020 - Free for doorbuster, $99 for non-doorbuster
  • Dec 12 - Fitbit Flex and Yurbuds Fitness Earbuds - $99.99 with $25 gift card for doorbuster, no gift card for non-doorbuster
  • Dec 13 - GTA 5 for Xbox 360- $19.99 for doorbuster, $39.99 for non-doorbuster
  • Dec 14 - Surface Pro, Surface Pro 2, Surface RT, or Surface 2 Complete Bundle - $100 off for doorbuster, $50 for non-doorbuster
  • Dec 15 - Xbox Music Pass 1 year - $29.99 for doorbuster, $69.99 for non-doorbuster
  • Dec 16 - HP Pavilion X2 13 - $599 for doorbuster, $699 for nondoorbuster
  • Dec 17 - SOL Republic Headphones - $39.99 for doorbuster, save $30 for non-doorbuster
  • Dec 18 - AT&T Lumia 1520 with $50 app card - Free for doorbuster, $99 non-doorbuster
  • Dec 19- JBL Flip Bluetooth Speaker - $39.99 for doorbuster, save $30 for non-doorbuster
  • Dec 20 - HP Envy 15 - $499 for doorbuster, $699 for non-doorbuster

These deals have not been verified, however. According to The Next Web, "If this leak is indeed accurate, Microsoft can still mix up the order of deals to keep potential customers guessing."