Monday, November 4th 2024
AMD Falling Behind: Radeon dGPUs Absent from Steam's Top 20
As we entered November, Valve just finished processing data for October in its monthly update of Steam Hardware and Software Survey, showcasing trend changes in the largest gaming community. And according to October data, AMD's discrete GPUs are not exactly in the best place. In the top 20 most commonly used GPUs, not a single discrete SKU was based on AMD. All of them included NVIDIA as their primary GPU choice. However, there is some change to AMD's entries, as the Radeon RX 580, which used to be the most popular AMD GPU, just got bested by the Radeon RX 6600 as the most common choice for AMD gamers. The AMD Radeon RX 6600 now holds 0.98% of the GPU market.
NVIDIA's situation paints a different picture, as the top 20 spots are all occupied by NVIDIA-powered gamers. The GeForce RTX 3060 remains the most popular GPU at 7.46% of the GPU market, but the number two spot is now held by the GeForce RTX 4060 Laptop GPU at 5.61%. This is an interesting change since this NVIDIA GPU was in third place, right behind the regular GeForce RTX 4060 for desktops. However, laptop gamers are in abundance, and they are showing their strength, placing the desktop GeForce RTX 4060 in third place, recording 5.25% usage.
Source:
Steam Survey
NVIDIA's situation paints a different picture, as the top 20 spots are all occupied by NVIDIA-powered gamers. The GeForce RTX 3060 remains the most popular GPU at 7.46% of the GPU market, but the number two spot is now held by the GeForce RTX 4060 Laptop GPU at 5.61%. This is an interesting change since this NVIDIA GPU was in third place, right behind the regular GeForce RTX 4060 for desktops. However, laptop gamers are in abundance, and they are showing their strength, placing the desktop GeForce RTX 4060 in third place, recording 5.25% usage.
222 Comments on AMD Falling Behind: Radeon dGPUs Absent from Steam's Top 20
I’ve been telling people for years to love the
waifuhardware you have, not pine for the one you can maybe possibly potentially get. If you need it for work - different story, but it will (or should) pay for itself. But for leisure? Nah, come on, there is an endless amount of games that will run perfectly fine on whatever one already has, assuming we aren’t talking someone with a PIII running 98 here, but then I would be very impressed that they are accessing the internet at all. But, of course, then I am usually met with usual screeching about how they totally need to play the latest slop in 12K with RT and at 420 FPS. This all needs to happen on a 100 dollar GPU. I am being hyperbolic here, obviously, but…The news actually saddens me. They have the cheese and the knife in their hands - just to squander the chance.
I think I'm gonna try taking the example of a friend of mine from now on... He had a R5 3600 that he was completely happy with, but he really wanted to repurpose it as a HTPC part. I suggested buying an AM5 system so he could proceed with his plans while also getting something new and upgradable as his new main rig. Did he? Of course not! He got a m-ITX AM4 board for his 3600, and a 5700X3D for his main rig. When I asked him why didn't he invest a bit more in some upgradability, he just asked "what would have been the point?" I guess he didn't want the best of the best. He just wanted something that's fit for purpose. This is an attitude most of us on this forum don't get. Having an opinion on AMD is not the problem. Telling people that the GPU they own and love is shit is the problem.
If I love my £200 Blackview phone, that's my business, and I don't want to hear how bad it is from an iPhone or Galaxy S owner, if you catch my drift. ;) I agree completely. Not to mention that members of modern governments lack the capability to take ownership for the lunch they had yesterday, not to mention something as complex as high-tech businesses.
also, could the mining gig thing have affected this graph? a lot of AMD gpus were sold to miners, which definitely never saw any gaming, specially on steam. Consequently a lot of people had to switch to NVIDIA when there were AMD shortages because of the mining cunts hoarding all the GPUs
See: it's literally just an emotional argument. It's always going to be negative if you're emotionally invested in the losing side; even if you have no intention to be malicious. Which was my case to begin with. I just had no desire to hijack that thread any further.
Absolute madlads still running 3dfx, S3 and Matrox cards. May Allah have mercy on their souls. Or… that. I like my version better.
As for graphics quality, theres plenty of games from a decade ago that still hold up well in terms of graphics quality, there is no need for fake frames or upscaling but Nvidia marketing works and people think they need the newest shiny GPU for the latest feature. I get it, you don't like PC gaming, kind of ironic when TPU is focused on enthusiast hardware and PC gaming, but PC gamers aren't to blame for companies getting greedy and neither Nvidia or AMD would go bankrupt for selling cheaper cards at more reasonable prices. The level of inflation that has affected everything is also to blame, but you can't just get people to stop buying things especially those in the hobby of PC building that have to buy the latest hardware every year.
I've had people ask me if I could recommend them a gaming laptop, and my answer was " no, get a PC". :laugh:
MSRP of RTX 3090 was indeed affected by GPU shortage crysis which maxed out around 2020-2021. There's absolutely no doubt that Nvidia (and also AMD) tried to take advantage of the situation. They were trying on customers. Extreme demand helped not only GPU manufacturers to maintain "not-before-seen" prices, but also chip makers (TSMC, ...).
RTX 3080 was well-priced. With 3090 you got 14% perf. boost over 3080 but paid +115% more. Price of RTX 4090 seems reasonable.
I was one of the people passionate enough to purchase a Vega Frontier Edition when it was all the rage, after all. The bulk of the RTX 3090's price comes from the 24 GDDR6X memory chips that it required. Back in 2020 this was a real concern, I remember reading a rumor at the time that $800 of its price was just the memory chips. The 3080 had only 10 and of a lower grade in comparison. Where they really gouged was the 3090 Ti :oops:
@LittleBro
Do note that this table lists all the cards with full chip transistor count. This is often not the case. The cheaper cards use chips that are scuffed in some way and are, in a sense, a way for companies to sell off what isn’t good enough. You aren’t paying the listed transistors per $.
I expected this thread to be bait for the nvidia defenders to be toxic, I didn't expect it to be this toxic though.
Prices will continue to go up as people demand progress because that creates more complexity.
I'm fine with PC gaming. I find PC gamers to be complete idiots who demand special treatment and have earned every bit of the toxic reputation which is if anything not nearly bad enough.
I don't care if people keep buying the latest hardware each year. But if you are doing that than you do have to look in the mirror and realize you are the problem and your purchasing and demands are the reason everything is stuck they way it is!
So, it's not about features, or performance, or drivers, or whatever that many keep saying for years. The general public buys the sticker. And for that, both tech press and posters who try to invent in every case reasons to send buyers to the Nvidia brand, have the major responsibility. We are in a monopoly because tech press and countless posters online play Nvidia's game.
Unfortunately, prices never really went significantly down to the point I would choose to take a risk - hopefully, there is a 6500 XT or 6600 at a very nice price this Black Friday. We'll see. :)
Then my 6750 XT is an all-around great card. Stable as any Nvidia. Then I also had a 7800 XT at some point. Its initial drivers were a bit meh, but everything got fixed in a couple of months except for the massive video playback power consumption which is an architectural problem. Other than that, great card. I'd still have it if I didn't have to prioritise my finances for the summer holidays.
So see, all 3 RDNA generations have been vastly different experiences. :)
If you want a play thing, don't get a 6500 XT, or the 4 GB VRAM will quickly disappoint you... unless you want it for old games, for which it's absolutely fine. I happen to have one of those as well, do you want it? :D