Same
AMD's Radeon RX 460 promises entry level gaming for the masses, with pricing starting at $109. We are reviewing the ASUS RX 460 STRIX OC, which comes with 4 GB instead of 2 GB and an additional 6-pin power connector, at a $140 price point.
www.techpowerup.com
Almost 1000 shaders, 4GB for ~$140, est. 3% inflation per year (very conservative) and that's 12% more. Cards in that price range are this
https://www.newegg.ca/asus-geforce-gt-1030-ph-gt1030-o2g/p/N82E16814126209 (384 shaders)
I fix up pc's as a hobby for freinds and family, many are/were using systems with radeon 6850 and earlier gen and equiv nvidia cards. I remember updating more than a few to windows 10 and having no drivers or driver issues. Try and find a current (within 1 year) gpu in the $100 ish range now.
Yeah, RX460 brand new at that price would be luxury for those who know real value of the GPU products.
Here in Romania the best deal on the brand new market with 100 bucks budget would be a Sapphire RX550 4GB (which is in fact decent if you play older games like me) at ~95$.
HD6850 was the stalker of its era!! I was rocking a HD7790 in 2013/2014 and it was mad quiet & fast too. One downside for current games would be the 1/2 gigs of VRAM.
The problem I'm aiming is not actually the brand new market with the lack of interest in what is supposed to be a budget GPU (75-170$ range IMO)...it would be the fact that used GPUs keep skyrocketing their prices to like 60-70% of their MSRPs (4y old architecture, keep this in mind) and till february/march next year, we'll see pain in the ass for the used GPU market [if you really know the stable prices]. Last year this time I got a STRIX GTX 960 2GB for 50$ it was one of the best deals ever.
With a bit of luck, everyone should find a GTX 1650 used for 100$. I saw this in Romania before COVID bullshit hit the stocks.
Screw the inflation, it's lasting how much they want. On the other hand, under 170 bucks is what we should pay for 1080p 60fps gaming, but they're both milking the cow (AMD/nVidia). And I'd say around 250 bucks for 2k 60. The cost of the technology may be higher, but now they keep releasing the 'next generation' in sync with next gen consoles. And back in the day it wasn't like days. Marketing moves, consumers got the money...and they got the milk.
Yeah, RX460 brand new at that price would be luxury for those who know real value of the GPU products.
Here in Romania the best deal on the brand new market with 100 bucks budget would be a Sapphire RX550 4GB (which is in fact decent if you play older games like me) at ~95$.
HD6850 was the stalker of its era!! I was rocking a HD7790 in 2013/2014 and it was mad quiet & fast too. One downside for current games would be the 1/2 gigs of VRAM.
The problem I'm aiming is not actually the brand new market with the lack of interest in what is supposed to be a budget GPU (75-170$ range IMO)...it would be the fact that used GPUs keep skyrocketing their prices to like 60-70% of their MSRPs (4y old architecture, keep this in mind) and till february/march next year, we'll see pain in the ass for the used GPU market [if you really know the stable prices]. Last year this time I got a STRIX GTX 960 2GB for 50$ it was one of the best deals ever.
With a bit of luck, everyone should find a GTX 1650 used for 100$. I saw this in Romania before COVID bullshit hit the stocks.
Screw the inflation, it's lasting how much they want. On the other hand, under 170 bucks is what we should pay for 1080p 60fps gaming, but they're both milking the cow (AMD/nVidia). And I'd say around 250 bucks for 2k 60. The cost of the technology may be higher, but now they keep releasing the 'next generation' in sync with next gen consoles. And back in the day it wasn't like days. Marketing moves, consumers got the money...and they got the milk.
it wasn't like this*
You already see that on laptop where people get cheap MX2*0 gpu where a proper setup APU(Dual Channel ....) outperform them.
I bet you'll find on every store here and there a guy who came to the IT shop with his 'tech-guru' friend who still stands for the 'AMD gets too hot on desktops, so we're taking AMD out the laptop side of things from start'. Or the 'Intel is recommended for gaming' without realising how good the perspective was almost 10 years ago vs how dumb sounds now. Also, little they know their mainstream, under 500$ brand new laptop could be capable of way more if it was running in a Dual Channel config (as you said). They keep comparing to their friends gaming laptops so they jump on the wave without 30 minutes of googling around.
Also the laptops area have even bigger gaps talking from the GPU perspective...it's like a few Vegas on the recent Ryzens, a few nvidia extra low-end thinked with the Skyrim/GTA V @900p in head and boom the expensive GTX1650/GTX1660/RTX2060 models.