- Joined
- Jan 27, 2024
- Messages
- 397 (1.15/day)
Processor | Ryzen AI |
---|---|
Motherboard | MSI |
Cooling | Cool |
Memory | Fast |
Video Card(s) | Matrox Ultra high quality | Radeon |
Storage | Chinese |
Display(s) | 4K |
Case | Transparent left side window |
Audio Device(s) | Yes |
Power Supply | Chinese |
Mouse | Chinese |
Keyboard | Chinese |
VR HMD | No |
Software | Android | Yandex |
Benchmark Scores | Yes |
I don't think there's much of "defending" a company. Prices are higher, consumers who used to pay for a product line before now have to spend more (like you), and those customers ofc don't like that.
Issue is that the broad customer has changed. GPUs are now more valuable since they can do stuff other than games. Whereas previously GPUs were bought mostly by gamers, now there are other people demanding those devices, and thus pricing rises.
There's not much that can be done. Of course there will still be some gamers with deep pockets that can still afford keeping their hobby, but your average gamer will need to downgrade, while prosumers buy those products happily since it's still cheap from their point of view.
The current pricing scheme so far seems to be acceptable for the overall market, thus nvidia can keep at it, much to the dismay of the gaming crowd.
The "issue" is that nvidia is not catering to the gaming crowd anymore, and that's ok.
Oh, a lot can be done:
1. Nvidia exits the gaming market, no one will miss them.
2. Nvidia abandons the GeForce brand, and uses its "valuable" GPUs for those who will pay - miners, the ones that demand those GPUs.
Gamers are not interested any more. Because there is no generational uplift. Whatever you got 5 years ago, the same you will get now.