You are falling victim of the excuses thrown from Nvidia trolls and fanboys, trying to defend Nvidia's pricing of the RTX 4000 series here.
That has NOTHING to do with nvida, WTF are you on about?
AMD are the ones that turned the x5x class GPU into an absolute joke.
Yes they are. They are the underdog that holds prices down. I know it sounds stupid and if AMD had stronger hardware their pricing would have been much worst. But for now, they are the only reason there is still some realism in the CPU and GPU market.
No multi billion dollar company is the underdog. AMD is one of the oldest names left in the business.
They will do better when people start buying their products. It's not AMD's fault that consumers are hypnotised by the RT marketing and rush to buy the RTX 3050 over the RX 6600. We can't demand for better hardware and at the same time keep finding excuses, even ridiculous ones, to NOT give them money to keep going.
The consumer does not owe AMD a dime. If they want to make money, they need to produce a competitive product. No a product that gets better with drivers 6 months later, not a product that launches a year late with last years feature set. If you cannot compete with performance and features, you compete on price.
Also, AMD themselves admitted to restricting RX 6000 supply to keep prices high. They did this to themselves and have no one to blame.
I really hope this happens. Both consumers and tech press should get a lesson of what happens when you keep buying/promoting the stronger brand for years and years.
Sorry if I sound bad or even deranged here, but consumers and tech press have an equal share here with AMD for us having an unbalanced GPU market. And if AM5 fails, guess what will happen in the CPU market.
There you go again with the "poor AMD underdog" thing. Where are you even getting the AM5 failing BS? Ryzen has sold extremely well. Because its competitive. Shocker, I know.
For example, I am reading that AMD should get sued for advertising 5.7GHz on 7950X3D because only one CCD can hit those frequencies. And I read this ridiculous argument when Intel is advertising 24 core CPUs with 16 of those being E cores that not only clock almost 1.5-2GHz lower, but they are inferior cores.
Attacking AMD has become a habit. A habit that makes people avoid AMD's products. That can only lead to one result. Monopolies in CPUs and GPUs.
Defending AMD against all threats, regardless of how much AMD self owns, is a tradition stretching back to the 90s when AMD somehow got blindsided by intel pulling back the socket compatibility the moment they were allowed to.
AMD has had some shat thrown at it. The most notable being intel blocking them from OEMs in the early 2000s. But things like their reputation for instability? Reputation for bad drivers? Bad economic decisions that led them to being near bankrupt? That's all on them, not intel, and certainly not the consumer. You even brought up the whole CPU market price thing, funny enough, prices for intel CPUs from first gen i5s and i7s to the 7th gen were relatively stable. Slight increases, nothing major. AMD arrives with ryzen, and sells 8 cores for $200 for two gens.
Then the 3000 series comes out, and guess what? $250 for six cores now. Now it's $300 for six cores, and 8 cores are pushing $450+!
Wait what?
Yeah, those massive increases on CPU prices? That was your ever wonderful can-do-no-wrong AMD, baby! The INSTANT they got ahead of intel they jacked their prices up, saying they were a "preeemium brand". Intel didnt do that when it had a de facto monopoly during the "bridge" years. Meanwhile, I can still get budget core i3s for under $100 brand new. I can get a core i5 that kicks the crap out of AMD's 7600 CPU, for $200. Yet I dont hear you complaining about AMD charging too much for meh hardware.
AMD is JUST as scummy as intel and nvidia, they just hide behind this veneer of "oh poor us we're not intel waaah" that their fans rush to defend EVERY time AMD isnt king of the hill.