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- Ex-usa | slava the trolls
I see the argument that 600W is manageable and sure, it is manageable. I think the concern is moreso that the competitive pressures in the market combined with stagnating returns on process tech development are putting us in a position where every generation has a massive increase in power draw, which is simply unsustainable in the long term. Will we one day be arguing "2000W is too much, I will only buy a 1250W GPU?" At some point power grids will not be able to keep up.
I think no, because many houses will be then at a threat of real fire hazard. You will need to build new cities and buildings infrastructure to handle that.
The trend now is actually the opposite. You buy lower emission TVs, refrigerators, washing machines... your average light bulbs went from 100-watts down to 9-watts or so.
Conveniently, new AAA games generally aren't very good. As games, that is--they're fairly impressive in terms of graphical fidelity, but of course the rate of improvement there has slowed to a crawl over the last decade, too.
If we ever reach a point where the newest GPUs threaten to max out the power of the average domestic circuit, it won't be especially difficult to opt out.
The last good game was Crysis 3 back in 2013. After that and the original Far Cry, there is nothing even remotely appealing in graphics realism and breakthrough revolutionary innovative graphics.
Ray-tracing alone is still an embarrassing hoax.