Sunday, January 21st 2018
NVIDIA Asks Retailers to Ensure Gamers Get Graphics Cards
The crypto-currency plague continues to nibble away at the PC gaming ecosystem, driving gamers to consoles. This affects the long-term prospects of graphics processor manufacturers like NVIDIA, who will find it difficult to pull gamers lost to consoles back to the PC ecosystem, should newer cost-effective ASICs arrest the viability of using GPUs to mine crypto-currency (as it did on several occasions in the past). The company is reportedly writing to PC hardware retailers to take steps to ensure that PC gamers have access to graphics cards first, and only then crypto-currency miners. The request doesn't prescribe any measures to control graphics card prices that have clearly gone out of hand.
Retailers in Germany responded lukewarmly, by setting quantity limitations, ranging between 2 to 5 units per order (and not per-household). Retailers responding to ComputerBase.de commented that they sometimes receive orders by e-mail with quantities running over 100 units. NVIDIA emphasizes that this request is a "recommendation" on its part, and not a directive, and that it would never interfere in freedom of commerce (by letting market-forces sell $200 graphics cards at $1000). The only people standing to lose are PC gamers who haven't upgraded their graphics cards in over two years, who are not able to play today's AAA games at recommended settings, especially when newer games are implementing the new DirectX 12 API, and their eye-candy have leaped to levels 2+ year old high-end graphics cards struggle to keep up with.
Source:
ComputerBase.de
Retailers in Germany responded lukewarmly, by setting quantity limitations, ranging between 2 to 5 units per order (and not per-household). Retailers responding to ComputerBase.de commented that they sometimes receive orders by e-mail with quantities running over 100 units. NVIDIA emphasizes that this request is a "recommendation" on its part, and not a directive, and that it would never interfere in freedom of commerce (by letting market-forces sell $200 graphics cards at $1000). The only people standing to lose are PC gamers who haven't upgraded their graphics cards in over two years, who are not able to play today's AAA games at recommended settings, especially when newer games are implementing the new DirectX 12 API, and their eye-candy have leaped to levels 2+ year old high-end graphics cards struggle to keep up with.
58 Comments on NVIDIA Asks Retailers to Ensure Gamers Get Graphics Cards
Im ready lol
I actually made a shitton... only to lose it in Spondooliesttech ASICs. ASICs are not anything I will ever reccomend, and honestly, most crypto users avoid them like the plague and won't get burned by that shit again.
When the GPU crisis is over I'll definitely go back to PC again.
store.steampowered.com/hwsurvey/
steamspy.com/country/
According to the SteamSpy site, my laptop's resolution is second to 1920x1080 ( the most common).
Just thought that was interesting, since despite what NVidia has posted, I won't be getting a new video card until I get a second job or, a better job (after graduation, 2 years from now!).
A $1000 for a GPU? Not worth it in my world!
The bonus is retailers will have more profit from selling other parts too, but this strategy sucks for those looking to upgrade only GPUs while using other existing parts.
Things that make you go hmmmmmm...
At this point I feel like faster and cheaper isn't what we need but rather 10x the amount of foundry currently available. Faster and cheaper won't be of any help against greediness. If mining doesn't change in the years to come, pc gamers might be obliged to ride on the wave if they want to play. Mainstream medias are starting to write articles on crypto, so it wouldn't be surprising to see more and more mainstream peoples wanting to get a piece of the cake. Crypto is the 21th century day gold fever.
Before this mining craze I wouldn't have thought about any of this because I got a good enough PC that would just need a GPU Upgrade. But now....
I'm actually thinking instead of upgrading my PC to just upgrade my Consoles, a 240GB SSD for the (stock 60GB) PS3, a 1TB SSD for the PS4 Pro and a huge microSD for the Switch. Then a few Accessoires like extra Controllers or Charging Stations. Would cost similar to upgrading just my PC (and that only partly) and would bring me way more returns.
What do miners need? A cheap motherboard a cheap CPU and 4+ graphic cards.
What do games need: 1 good GPU.
Integrate 1 fast GPU to an (expensive) motherboard and gamers only will buy them as miners won't be interested.
I cannot imagine this is difficult.
Nice problem to have i guess.