AMD could be shifting to focus on the mid-range GPU market - heres why thats
a good thing
Date:
Wed, 13 Sep 2023 11:31:10 +0000
Description:
AMD might not make a Radeon RX 8800 and 8900, and Im totally fine with that.
FULL STORY ======================================================================
Looking at the graphics card market, its pretty clear - even to a casual observer - that AMD has ceded a significant amount of ground to Nvidia in the high-end arena.
The RTX 4090 is arguably the best graphics card ever made, and Nvidia still dominates the PC gaming space as per the Steam Hardware Survey .
Now, it looks like AMD is ready to surrender its high-end GPU market share entirely, with new leaks suggesting Team Red wont be selling high-powered Radeon cards at all in its next generation. Navi4 lineup will not have any high-end GPUsThink of it like RDNA1 or Polaris generation. August 4, 2023 See more
Multiple leakers have claimed that AMD has canceled production of its Navi 41 and 42 GPUs, instead focusing on the less powerful Navi 43 and 44. Prolific GPU leaker @Kepler_L2 outright stated on Twitter (well, X, but I refuse to
use that ridiculous name) that the Navi4 lineup will not have any high-end GPUs, while @All_The_Watts commented ominously that Only Navi 43 and Navi 44 survive.
What this means in practice is that we likely wont see an RX 8800 or RX 8900 in the next generation of Radeon cards, nor any XT or XTX variants of those GPUs. Presumably, the flagship card will now be a decidedly midrange Radeon
RX 8700 XT (or some variation on that name). Why is AMD scaling back its GPU aspirations?
While its easy to write off this move as AMD simply admitting defeat in the enthusiast GPU space against the juggernaut that is Nvidia, theres actually a very different key factor at play here.
As claimed by Bits And Chips , AMD plans to scale back RX 8000 production
with chip manufacturer TSMC in favor of general-purpose GPUs and field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) - two types of components commonly
used for AI training and development. AMD will sacrifice next Radeon gaming GPUs (RX8000) output at TSMC in order to pump up FPGA and GPGPU production. September 8, 2023 See more
Weve already seen rumblings that the rise of AI could lead to another GPU shortage - in fact, Nvidia made more than $10 billion dollars in just three months thanks to the recent AI boom brought on by the seemingly omnipresent ChatGPT . In fact, our own John Loeffler predicted that Nvidias AI success would mean the end of its GeForce GPUs - and it looks like AMD might be
taking that lesson to heart.
To be fair to Team Red, its not an unwise move; while I personally loved the Radeon RX 7900 XTX , its undeniable that Nvidia has won the current round of the GPU war with its powerful high-end cards. Despite that, AMDs more affordable cards like the RX 7600 remain an excellent proposition for cash-strapped gamers - so if making GPUs for AI is unavoidable right now, focusing its efforts on the midrange and budget space is a smart decision.
I personally used an AMD Radeon RX 5700 XT for almost two years and found it to be a very dependable GPU - so if AMD can deliver a solid performance
uptick over its currently-available midrange cards and also keep the price at a sensible level, we could see Team Red produce some of the best cheap graphics cards in the not-too-distant future. You might also like... RX 7800 XT vs RTX 4070 This graphics card generation is over and it was mostly trash Starfield proves 8K gaming remains a frontier too far
======================================================================
Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/computing/gpu/amd-could-be-shifting-to-focus-on-the- mid-range-gpu-market-heres-why-thats-a-good-thing
--- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 (Linux/64)
* Origin: tqwNet Technology News (1337:1/100)