As Nvidia /AMD push out the high end standards, Intel ARC aims to PULL IN the low end.

AMD are almost certainly gonna price RDNA3 at or above Nvidias competing product.
From the rumor mill RDNA3 is 2.5x more powerful than RDNA2 which should should translate to AMD having the more powerful raster hardware in the coming generation, like by quite a margin if Ada is "only" 2x as powerful as Ampere.
The same way they had a better chip in Ryzen 5000 and they priced up accordingly.....im pretty confident they will price their RX7000 GPUs higher than Nvidias.

Id hope to be proven wrong.
If they became arrogant and price it too high, bad for them, but unless they do that(which we don't know for sure yet), its very competitive in terms of performance, power efficiency and features.
 
Last edited:
AMD are almost certainly gonna price RDNA3 at or above Nvidias competing product.
From the rumor mill RDNA3 is 2.5x more powerful than RDNA2 which should should translate to AMD having the more powerful raster hardware in the coming generation, like by quite a margin if Ada is "only" 2x as powerful as Ampere.
The same way they had a better chip in Ryzen 5000 and they priced up accordingly.....im pretty confident they will price their RX7000 GPUs higher than Nvidias.

Id hope to be proven wrong.

Morgan Freeman Good Luck GIF



To give you a sense of how utterly irrelevant AMD is in the dGPU space, the entire RX 6XXX line combined (already widely regarded as being faster at rasterization) has like 2-3x lower marketshare than the 3080 alone (a high end $1000+ GPU). AMD's dGPU brand is absolutely toxic, even a $100 discount Vs. the comparable Nvidia part and undisputed performance advantage would see them struggle to gain a 10-20% marketshare Vs. Nvidia's 80-90%. They are low single digits as they stand right now and effectively don't even exist as a competitor in practice. Not that Nvidia would ever allow them to gain any kind of foothold, they already operate with ridiculously high hardware margins (nearing 100% based on their financials) and would still make money hand over fist dropping their entire price to performance stack a couple tiers (i.e. 3080 priced like a 3060Ti) if such a move were required to compete with AMD or Intel parts. Somebody would have to eat multiple billions of dollars in losses to encroach upon Nvidia's dGPU monopoly, and that's assuming Nvidia weren't willing to eat a loss of their own to fend it off (which they almost certainly would be).
 
Last edited:
Top Bottom