- Joined
- Apr 2, 2011
- Messages
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Let me first drop some rationality to everyone here....who seems to want to quibble.
Steam says we don't play 2024 games in 2024
If you're too lazy to read even the headline, it's that most users in 2024 (85%) didn't play any games released in 2024.
What exactly does this say about gaming? In my world, the clear truth is that most people don't value RT because they literally cannot use it. That's pretty obvious, but you're welcome to debate the whole "if they had it, they'd use it" equivocation. Now...combine that with the B580 absolutely killing it over this holiday season, and the conclusion is pretty clear. What consumers want is games that are fun to play, not driven by any "message," and they want hardware that they don't have to sell a kidney for. It's my belief that if AMD can come in with the 9070 XT...or the 8800...or whatever the official name comes out being, they can beat Nvidia and get that market share back.
I'm sure that plenty of people will argue that the 5080 will trounce the 9070...and I don't care. I can rock 4k worth or pixels with 144 hz performance on a 3080...let alone anything higher. It was priced at an MSRP of 699 USD. This was pre-pandemic, when Nvidia and AMD had to actually compete for market share instead of printing money with "AI" stickers being worth hundreds of dollars once slapped onto a GPU...and I think AMD has had that come to jesus moment and decided to stop competing for that halo market which cannot be profitable because there's so little volume.
You are welcome to hate AMD, Nvidia, and Intel. That said, this is about not accepting that they are charging egregious prices for generational gaps that are often not down to an investment in technology, but development of shiny new things that literally don't benefit 85% of the community...and that's a generous interpretation. If the halo 5% of the 15% is actually who can purchase high end hardware then you're looking at 0.75% of people. That's just silly to focus on, when the investment in producing cards amortized over 100k cards versus 2k cards requires them to cost 50 times as much. Remember kids, overhead costs can kill businesses and profitability faster than most other bad decisions.
Steam says we don't play 2024 games in 2024
If you're too lazy to read even the headline, it's that most users in 2024 (85%) didn't play any games released in 2024.
What exactly does this say about gaming? In my world, the clear truth is that most people don't value RT because they literally cannot use it. That's pretty obvious, but you're welcome to debate the whole "if they had it, they'd use it" equivocation. Now...combine that with the B580 absolutely killing it over this holiday season, and the conclusion is pretty clear. What consumers want is games that are fun to play, not driven by any "message," and they want hardware that they don't have to sell a kidney for. It's my belief that if AMD can come in with the 9070 XT...or the 8800...or whatever the official name comes out being, they can beat Nvidia and get that market share back.
I'm sure that plenty of people will argue that the 5080 will trounce the 9070...and I don't care. I can rock 4k worth or pixels with 144 hz performance on a 3080...let alone anything higher. It was priced at an MSRP of 699 USD. This was pre-pandemic, when Nvidia and AMD had to actually compete for market share instead of printing money with "AI" stickers being worth hundreds of dollars once slapped onto a GPU...and I think AMD has had that come to jesus moment and decided to stop competing for that halo market which cannot be profitable because there's so little volume.
You are welcome to hate AMD, Nvidia, and Intel. That said, this is about not accepting that they are charging egregious prices for generational gaps that are often not down to an investment in technology, but development of shiny new things that literally don't benefit 85% of the community...and that's a generous interpretation. If the halo 5% of the 15% is actually who can purchase high end hardware then you're looking at 0.75% of people. That's just silly to focus on, when the investment in producing cards amortized over 100k cards versus 2k cards requires them to cost 50 times as much. Remember kids, overhead costs can kill businesses and profitability faster than most other bad decisions.