Wrong. They are limiting the production in favor of the AI market which now represents more than 80% of their marketshare and is much more lucrative.
stockanalysis.com
Very specifically, they are producing for Elon Musk rather than us.
Musk's xAI has raised $6 Billion at a valuation of $50 billion to buy 100,000 Nvidia chips to power Tesla’s line of Full Self Driving cars.
techreport.com
They couldn't care less whether a 5090 is priced $2000, $3000 or $4000, first off because these prices are inflated at the AIB or retailer level, secondly because that is no longer their main source of revenue, by far.
If they knew that they don't have enough supply and they knew, then they should have come out and say "MSRP for 5070 Ti? $1100", not $750. They should announce $750 when they can supply enough cards to cover demand, not when they have enough supply for 5 minutes. And they can't announce MSRP $750 when most models will play $200 over MSRP. AI excuse here is not an argument because they KNOW how much orders they have from Musk or anyone else. It's not that they intended to flood the market with RTX cards and the phone rang and it was Musk and they had to change their plans in the last minute.
And if they don't care about prices, they wouldn't have baited users with those FAKE prices.
As for AIBs and retailers, if they are responsible for those prices, then why all that negativity about AMD's pricing. It's the retailers and AIBs who will increase prices anyway, so either $550 either $750 MSRP for the 9070XT, it doesn't matter.
But you forget gamers (like me) stuck on a 20X0 or earlier, trying to upgrade. We're forced to deal with what is available.
If you want to upgrade, send two letters.
One to Nvidia asking for lower prices.
One to AMD thanking them for the Frame Generation support through FSR 3.1.
Well, you can send and a third letter asking Nvidia why they didn't provided Frame Generation to RTX 2000 series cards.
They don't, MSRP for the 5080 is $999 while the MSRP of the 4080 was $1,199. They don't care about this segment anymore. In the US alone, there was something like 1000 RTX 5080 available. Do you really think they don't understand the concept of an economy of scale?!
Nvidia's marketing department are magicians. I am keep telling it. You are using 5080 MSRP as if it is real. That's not an argument. A fake MSRP is not an argument that favors your opinion. It's a counter argument that proves the opposite.
Sure, I guess I missed the fun. I'm not trying to pick on you. I'm sure eager for this card to get out to see if I'm finally going to be able to upgrade with a product that makes sense, and I like discussing the facts, so I'm quick to point out things that don't make sense IMO.
You stuck on a fun line and missed the whole point. When making news articles you don;t put your opinion, or what countless trolls post on the internet about AMD to make it look bad, to damage control for Nvidia's pricing. You just don't. It's a news article.
For example, one of the latest news is about RTX 5060 Ti having also an 8GB version. Well, imagine the title saying "another 8GB card". That would be driving negativity towards Nvidia. Well, you DON'T. Not in a news title, if you intent to be a neutral reporter. You want to critisize Nvidia for preparing an 8GB card in 2025, that will probably be selling for $300 or more. OK, do it in aseperate post unter the news article. NOT on the title.
The estimated cost per unit is,
- 9070XT: $459
- RTX 5080: $429
Now, how much will RTX 5080's price change if we assume that a customer like Nvidia gets somewhat better prices from TSMC?
2016: 84% buy $100-$300 GPU
2025: 85% buy $700 GPU
View attachment 386687
This is probably the most interesting post in the whole thread. It shows how much the market changed and how much more people spend for a graphics card.
(or that AMD's statistics are bogus)