I'm not comparing it to a past product. I'm comparing it to its actual worth. If it doesn't match its price tag, I won't buy it. Even if I had a million £, I wouldn't buy a Lamborghini because it offers terrible value.
That's right. Gaming is a hobby, not a necessity. There's still hundreds of old classics that I can play just fine with my 6500 XT. I'll want an upgrade eventually, but it won't have to be a ridiculously overpriced halo product from Nvidia.
That's a good way of thinking about it.
My thinking is that there's the
1. Halo products - They offer terrible value for money and depreciate quickly. In GPUs, avoid at all costs. In CPUs, only buy if your budget allows it. CPUs keep their usage value for a bit longer as generational upgrades aren't so significant. Unfortunately, Nvidia is positioning a bigger and bigger chunk of their product stack into this category. Spending nearly £1,000 on a graphics card that you'll swap for something else only a couple years later when DLSS 4 comes out and only runs on the next high-end thing is a terrible value, whichever way you look at it.
2. Mid-range - It gives you nearly the same experience as the top-end, but at a significantly lower price, and lower depreciation over time. The best value for money is here.
3. Low-end - Low price, low performance, and almost no resale value. This is where I shop when I'm curious about something new, but don't want to touch my savings for something unknown.
Edit: It's not just about price per performance, either. I couldn't care less if my games run at 60 or 100 fps, so from my point of view, the only difference between a midrange and high-end graphics card (besides price and power consumption / cooling requirements) is how well future games will run on it - which Nvidia kills by making new DLSS iterations run only on the newest generation. So effectively, the high-end offers worse value than ever before.