- Joined
- Dec 17, 2024
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- 98 (1.42/day)
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System Name | Zen 3 Daily Rig |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 9 5900X with Optimus Foundation block |
Motherboard | ASUS Crosshair VIII Dark Hero |
Cooling | Hardware Labs 360GTX and 360GTS custom loop, Aquacomputer HighFlow NEXT, Aquacomputer Octo |
Memory | G.Skill Trident Z Neo 32GB DDR4-3600 (@ 3733 CL14) |
Video Card(s) | Nvidia RTX 3080 Ti Founders Edition with Alphacool Eisblock |
Storage | x2 Samsung 970 Evo Plus 2TB, Crucial MX500 1TB |
Display(s) | LG 42" C4 OLED |
Case | Lian Li O11 Dynamic |
Power Supply | be Quiet! Straight Power 12 1500W |
Mouse | Corsair Scimitar RGB Elite Wireless |
Keyboard | Keychron Q1 Pro |
Software | Windows 11 Pro |
You have a completely wrong read here.I guess Nvidia's brain washing is doing wonders. Nvidia comes out with fake MSRPs, with real prices being even twice the MSRP price in some rare occasions, no availability, missing hardware(ROPs) and features(PhysX), bad drivers(black screens, games crushing, cards bricked), design problems that can lead to fire(on the cable, on the PSU, or the PCB) and people's minds are still stuck in the narrative
"If AMD doesn't put low prices, their products, no matter performance and features, will be DOA".
In CPUs when Intel messed up, people quickly decided to give a chance to AM5. The X3D chips helped, even considering that the 7000 X3D chips are not the best for productivity and 9800X3D is more or less only for gaming. But people didn't rushed to say "9800X3D for $399 or 9800X3D DOA". No, they gone and bought the CPU.
In GPUs Nvidia messed up even worst in hardware than Intel, shows no respect to consumers by making fun of them in their faces and people demand from AMD to give them the perfect product at the lowest price to not call it DOA and in the end rush to pay Nvidia.
I have to give credit to Nvidia's marketing department. They have the whole market hypnotized.
So let's talk about CPUs. Intel was giving you lackluster increases for years where the same quad core i7 got 5% IPC increase year over year. They still sold better, why? Because AMD was still in the Bulldozer era and those were worse.
When Zen and Zen+ came out, it was a step in the right direction, but still needed work. Intel started floundering at 14nm here which helped a lot. Zen 2 came out and was a hit, but still not quite as good as Intel. So what did AMD do? They priced aggressively. The market noticed and started to buy in.
Zen 3 comes and now you are beating Intel entirely (until they launched 12th gen), the price reflected that as Zen 3 was priced higher than Zen 2. But the market was already switching to AMD's side massively.
Intel managed to stay somewhat in the game with 12th-14th gen, but definitely at the cost of massive power draw and other issues. Zen 4 priced slightly better than Zen 3 and same with Zen 5. X3D comes out and for gaming massively stomps Intel. AMD can confidently claim performance leadership here.
So where does that leave GPU? Well AMD has 10% marketshare. If they want to capture more of it then they have to do what they did with early Zen. The market doesn't want "just slot into whatever Nvidia dictates the prices should be". The market wants AMD to stomp Nvidia's 70 class, potentially come within their 80 class, and completely reset the pricing dynamic of what mainstream segment is. If they do it right where it would look incredibly stupid to buy a 5070 Ti at +$300 or more over the 9070 XT and AMD can turn the sales into a volume game, then it's a win win. You capture more market, you make more money on volume, and you've successfully given your competitor who has market domination an obvious black eye in the eyes of the consumer, and perhaps the mindshare starts changing.
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