Pricing is not 100% resistant to all the factors associated with scalping, supply and demand, and inflation. Those who want to game with good frames today at 4K ultra settings have to make a conscious decision to say I'm all in because pricing is obviously high right now.
What I have stated is that if my mission was to get an entry level PC for gaming at 1080P, I would have absolutely no problem with the 6500 XT being one of my options. The wave of criticism in that regard is unwarranted. One alternative could just be settling for console gaming, and those are also effected by all of the previously mentioned factors.
No-one is saying that pricing isn't high right now, but we're talking about 5 years old levels of performance, even if there's more demand and inflationary factors that's just ridiculous.
As an example: 5 years ago the top CPUs were the Ryzen 7 1700/X and the Intel i7 8700/K, both priced at approximately $350. For around $350 now, you can get an i7-12700 non-K or Ryzen 7 5800X, which blow them away, their raw computing performance has doubled. Meanwhile, in the world of graphics cards, AMD don't even care if it's faster.
Is the 6500 XT an acceptable option for entry-level gaming? Yeah, I suppose. But, did it need to be so limited and lose features historically present at this price point? No. Everyone involved in making graphics cards is making record profits right now. A turd is a turd, even if it's the best turd we've got. They didn't even have to do much to make it a lot more usable, as suggested above, a 96-bit bus with 6GB memory would have helped a lot. A few more CUs would have also pushed it comfortably ahead of the RX 5500.
It's barely fit for purpose as-is, except for a budget gaming build that has to be new and can't get anything else. With the RX 6600, It wasn't easy for AMD to justify releasing a midrange card intended for 1080p heading into 2022, but at least it can hold 60 fps at high/max details and is usually playable at 1440p. I think it was GN that made the point that the RX 6500 XT is almost a 720p card nowadays (or it soon will be) and 720p monitors are obsolete! And since they deleted the HTPC features it'll have artificially limited usefulness even when it's retired. It would have been really freaking helpful for old systems if AV1 goes mandatory for video content in a few years, but nope, AMD says "%@"! you" for trying that one, here's a paperweight.
Most reviewers are using historical products as a reference, since they've been around awhile, so sure, like GN said, you CAN ignore this and only look at the market right now, but why should you? Should we continue to pay the same price for an arguably worse performing product, with less features, 5 years later? A lot of gamers have done exactly what you suggested and abandoned PC gaming for consoles.
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