Nobody could have expected the level of demand for chips or even had time to react if they did.
I’ve just had to cancel an order from VAG because they can’t get the silicon for the car or even give me an ETA.
The issue is AMD went into all of this with a lot of 7NM production geared towards consoles,as KompuKare crunched some of the numbers. Last year when Mediatek dialed down 7NM orders,AMD got that extra capacity but their were reports from reliable sources,they moved more towards the PS5. So its clear even if there was no pandemic,they were not going totally in with their consumer CPUs/GPUs.
One also has to question why they dialed down production of 12NM/14NM GF CPUs and GPUs. Nvidia didn't dial down their production as much - its why the 12NM Turing chips are still widely found in a lot of prebuilt systems,and tons of systems with AMD CPUs and Nvidia dGPUs.
Consoles is about more than money, its about AMD appearing as a competent and reliable friend, its about showing they can be trusted and relied up on to make custom chips tailored to any potential customers needs.
Its why AMD IP is now in Samsung Mobile Phones, you guys have any idea how bigger win that is? Intel and especially Nvidia have been desperate to do something like that for a decade and AMD not only did it but landed the worlds largest Mobile Phone manufacture.
Mercedes Benz are now using AMD SoC's in their cars.
Elon Musk being a gamer wants AMD to create a PS5 like SoC to put in to his cars.
It looks like Microsoft now want AMD to make ARM chips for thier Surface Laptops.
Things such as IP licensing and MS/Sony console chips are great,but the problem is stuff like servers,CPUs,etc are high margin. AMD server growth is constrained by its production volume - Intel is again using this against Intel(from what I am hearing).
Intel and Nvidia have much higher margins still,so something is dragging down AMD especially as their current pricing isn't a bargain either. When you look at the amount of GPUs Nvidia have sold,ie,both 12NM and 8NM its staggering how much volume they must have received,especially as they use much bigger chips than AMD does.
AMD got a bit lucky Intel still has production/design issues and Ampere had problems meaning it was a bit underwhelming. The issue here is Nvidia(and even Intel) won't be making that mistake twice,especially Nvidia.
The fact that Intel is buying up TSMC capacity,and is using TSMC 6NM before either Nvidia or AMD,means you can see good old Pat Gelsinger trying to screw over AMD/Nvidia a different way - making sure they restrict access to TSMC production. It does make you think whether Nvidia moving to Samsung was more about volume,than cost itself.
He was there at Intel when they gave Dell,etc those backhanders.
I personally think,that AMD wasted a golden opportunity on 7NM to really destroy Intel/Nvidia marketshare. But ATM,Nvidia has massively more share than AMD in every GPU related area,and Intel despite loosing share still has far more share,with worse products.
This is the same problem which also hurt them to some degree during the Athlon 64 era - they got limited by volume,and Intel used that against AMD(they leveraged this against OEMs IIRC).
The thing is the more AMD push in to these markets the more desirable they look to others, if AMD can prove yes we can design SoC's for Samsung's mobile phones and they are happy, yes we can design a PS5 level games console for an electric car, Microsoft trust us with a halo product, we can do ARM.... the more people come knocking on their door "can you do this for me?"
But again,if they don't have enough available volume,then they are spreading themselves thin.
A 300mm2~400mm2 console chip is going to be lower margin than say AMD selling a GPU with a similar sized chip. A CPU with under 200MM2 of 7NM chips,and a cheap 12NM/14NM I/O die sells for nearly £700. A fully enabled 300MM2~400MM2 console chip,might be equivalent of enough working 7NM chiplets for a few Ryzen 9 5950X CPUs,or an Epyc one.
The same chiplets and GPUs sold in Enterprise devices,even more money.
The problem of being a supplier for mass made products like consoles,etc is the larger companies such as Sony/MS push prices down as much as they can. If Sony can sell a PS5 disk model profitably for £450,it makes you wonder how much AMD is getting from each sale. Even with a phone,Samsung,Apple,etc are notorious in pushing suppliers downwards,and Nvidia found that the hard way. The PC space is definitely higher margin - Nvidia with over half of its revenue from "consumer dGPUs" is doing extremely well.