That's actually a good thing. You can keep your very expensive video cards longer, and don't feel the temptation to buy a new generation, just because is 50% stronger than what you currently have. Even if there are no quality games out there worthy of a new GPU investment.
Why? Is your buying decision dependant on what the fastest GPU is right now, or what Nvidia told you "you have to have, because of feature X"? Please don't.
Interesting comments reads, but I was wondering. Maybe 3dFX had a great idea 20 years ago, but bad implementation.
Instead of using 1 big monolithic GPU, why not using multiple small ones, that are easy and faster to produce due to better yields.
They call it "chiplets" nowadays, so why for AMD to abandon the High-end and Enthusiast segment, if you can stack 4 or more of those, basically doubling performance of the video card with each pair added. I thought they were going to smoke enVideea with this...
Confusing times.
Yes, but these GPUs were way different back then. 3DFX SLI (the original SLI, not Nvidias SLI, which name was essentially bought from buying up the rest of 3DFX) works by using multiple GPUs in tandem who do different parts of the work and it's perfectly synchronized, not like Crossfire / SLI now (I mean it's dead anyway), because the hardware was specifically build for it from the start. But newer GPUs, they don't work like that, they are built to work alone, and it's just optional to let them work with a partner card. Now that was a lot of work and they abandoned it, also it was mostly multiple cards, not multiple GPUs on one board. TLDR: way different tech than what 3DFX used back then, but of course it's a shame 3DFX is gone. It's one of the biggest regrets of all time.
maybe the most recent gpu's is all i can remember, huh. interesting.
radeon 6800 xt launch date was november 2020, so it took 3 years for 7800 xt to replace it. its prob fair to say its not just covid, but we are on a 3 year cycle.
im glad i got my 7900 xt for the price i did, im set for many years. i was playing assassins creed brotherhood at 160 fps ultra setting last night (one of the few ac games that supports high refresh) and the fans didn't even kick on on the gpu, cause the card itself is so powerful. absolutely blew me away. lol
not a single frame drop either, was 160 the entire time. same as in uncharted 4. unbelievable the thing this power has, now in uncharted 4 the fans do kick in to high gear and she gets got. its about the only game that makes my card extra hot.
The 7800 XT isn't even the real successor to the 6800 XT, the 7900 XT is (they renamed everything 1 tier up), more or less, but the chip is more deactivated in comparison. Just like with Nvidia gave us a fat chip for just 700 $ (i mean if you were lucky to get one), the 3080, the 6800 XT was just a slightly deactivated part of a 6900 XT big chip to compete with that, that all for 650-700$, something we can't imagine now. Nvidias big chip is 1600$ now and still not the full thing, it's ridiculous, but whatever I guess. The 4080 isn't that big but still costs 1200$. In comparison AMD didn't increase prices that much, so I'm not surprised people don't like this gen, mainly because Nvidia got too greedy. First they did it to lose old inventory of 3090 and down, but that was never the real reason. The real reason was, they saw with covid times that people will pay ridiculous prices and they kept it up.