Soldato
- Joined
- 25 Sep 2009
- Posts
- 10,242
- Location
- Billericay, UK
I've been waiting for GPU pricing to return 'to normal' since 2013........
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Here's the funny thing, ps 5 and xbox are in MASSIVE demand (will be far more in demand than GPUs too) and are basically out of stock.... yet.... there is no price gouging going on with them at the most common re/e tailers
WOW i didn't realise that Arcade died so long ago (about 20 years ago)
One of those three you mention appears to be doing quite well.Yeah that graph seems rather odd!
No way are consoles that?!
Although I do definitely agree with the way gaming is going, VR + cloud + mobile really is going to be the "future".
From that graph it looks like console gaming haven't increased over the last 20 years which doesn't seem right as just about every person or house hold i know now has a game console
(even a lot of females have a game console these days)
Its annoying as it spreads out quite a bit over the desk, makes it take up much more room than a standard base would.
From that graph it looks like console gaming haven't increased over the last 20 years which doesn't seem right as just about every person or house hold i know now has a game console
(even a lot of females have a game console these days)
WOW i didn't realise that Arcade died so long ago (about 20 years ago)
Plus it HAHa at all them PC gaming is dieding threads i seen as PC gaming from that Graph looks to be bigger now then it has ever beenIt even bigger then console gaming
From that graph it looks like console gaming haven't increased over the last 20 years which doesn't seem right as just about every person or house hold i know now has a game console
(even a lot of females have a game console these days)
My 12 year old niece spends a small fortune on these microtransactions in the free Roblox gamesmobile revenue is so high due to the revenue model, it heavily favours the model most of us hate, where free or low upfront cost, but then addiction mechanics to keep you spending on microtransactions.
GPU's in general have a really weird selling method. Years ago when a new card was about to come out in a lot of instances the older cards got sold off for cheap, i remember big deals on the Geforce 2 ultra before the Geforce 3 came out. That no longer happens, these days cards just get more expensive when they get phased out for some reason. Just look at the radeon vii listing on here, its about a grand, not in stock though. Same with the 2080 ti's they have left, they're either more expensive than they were or have maintained the same price.
It kind of happened on the 1000 series, 1080ti's were been sold for £500, I think the only time they were at that price point since launch, but it likely hurts the vendors, when old stock is sold cheap, so I think now stock is never allowed to get high, to avoid it happening. What we seeing happening is more and more aggressive moves to keep prices as high as possible, the old natural market forces no longer apply.
This is one of the reasons I think people are in la la land where they think nvidia is trying to push out these as fast as they can and at one point everything will be in stock ready to order for next day with much lower prices, wont happen.
Remember when ocuk "found" a few strix 1080ti's in their warehouse (7 or 8 of them iirc)? They had them up for sale then increased the price by 100+ after they seen they were selling. Makes me wonder what's going on in the warehouse when a few grands worth of gpus can go missing then suddenly show up in time to be gouged.
In the early 90's, nearly everyone I knew owned either a Mega Drive, SNES or Amiga (I wonder if they are including the Amiga in the console bit of the graph or the PC bit? I reckon the console bit).
I am a big believer in the economics that volume drives prices down. Gaming sales drive console sales and PC GPU sales, less sales, the higher you pay in the long term.
We need a few beers and a pub to discuss this properly but forced console shortages at retail outlets during Christmas is nothing new, it creates a 'mania' around a product at Christmas and helps to boost sales longer term through PR exposure. I hope we can agree on this as I think there is just too much history here to argue otherwise.
Scalpers know it too and they also know that the budget for a parent scraping around trying to buy an Xbox/PS and a couple of games for little Timmy is different to the budget Joe Bloggs PC enthusiast from OCUK who dropped £2k on a titan the other year, only to have it blown away by a £450 replacement this year and then paid 'a little more than they wanted' on a £1,900 Palit 3090. All things considered these people are chewing £1,400-1,500 per year just in GPU depreciation and are fair game for scalpers because the mentality when assessing the value of a purchase is entirely different.
If you are a family man with two kids that's a purchase you'll need to hide from the missus or, not make at all. On the other hand, paying £100 over the odds for an Xbox/PS on the other hand is a no-brainer if it means no Xbox Christmas Morning.
I personally don't think that console shortages are down to components or supply chain issues and that over time we can look back on this latest console shortage and have a laugh about it as some of us did during the Dreamcast '99 shortage where i had to go buy a U.S.A model for £450 (over double retail) Christmas week 1999 due to Sega's ongoing distribution problems.
If you look at longer term trends in gaming, its clear where the structural decline is and where the opportunities are:
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It might be too soon to call but it is entirely possible that the next generation of games consoles will be ARM based, because Sony and Microsoft must, at some point, enter (or in Sony's case re-enter) the mobile gaming market. Nintendo called it right with the Switch, they were so far ahead of everyone elses thinking that people thought they were crazy to release an underpowered ARM based console but Nintendo are now in pole position after a painful transition.
This is why I believe (and others probably too) Nvidia needs ARM, it will allow them to go from being totally removed from what Sony/Microsoft are doing to be, potentially, inside every gaming device on the planet. If you look at the above, it would mean that Nvidia ARM CPU's (licensed or directly designed) are inside all Mobile and Console devices.
It's daunting in some respects but at the same time, it might mean that more discrete GPU wafers get given to the PC Hobby Market and only to us, not split with the console market.
Strangely, a taste of the future is already here with the Macbook Pro M1, it has a fully integrated ARM CPU and Apple GPU. I think this is the template for the next Xbox and Playstation as it allows them to fully embrace mobile gaming and this would be the catalyst for higher PC GPU prices.
As it stands right now, volume drives costs and there is so much volume for AMD and Nvidia, its hard to see prices staying high for long.
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