- Apr 22, 2003
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News broken by GN. Even though there is no press release I can see right now, this is not a rumor. Info comes directly from EVGA CEO, citing difficulty working with Nvidia.
OFC, but why attempt to divert from the EVGA/NVIDIA story into Intel Arc? As he mentions later, his channel has enough coverage on Nvidia's toxic relationship with their partners. He can build on that quickly and release new meaningful content. But the initial reaction? Divert towards Intel, as if it has anything in common with this story.
Word is he insisted on hand delivering the dishes himself unfortunately Raj dropped the containers.I heard Raja is sending his best hot dishes to EVGA head quarters.
This was a big surprise for me as well, as EVGA was my “go-to” brand for GPU’s. Still surprised by the move especially with their announcement around not pivoting to AMD; unless this is a posturing ploy on their part.
The GN video also implies that the CEO is looking to focus on family as the GPU division was taking a lot of his time and attention.
My thoughts are:
1- Pivot and sell motherboards, cases, fans,etc. Basically become Corsair while also expanding the integration of these products within their software.
2- Hire someone to take the reigns on the GPU division and sell AMD cards.
3- Do nothing, which is what they are implying they will do, and watch people leave or get laid off because they no longer have any work. Also watch Kingpin leave and sell his high-end cards through Asus or some other competitor. Ultimately becoming a much smaller company.
4- Sell the company (even worse than #3 in my opinion)
I lol'd at the turn in the leather jacket reality show quip. But wait, isn't the mid and low end where they are making a profit?One logical catalyst? nVidia 4k cards will pull such a premium evga was unnecessary and relegated to plebeian status. Turn in your leather jacket immediately.
Didn't Nvidia buy 3DFX? Is history repeating?
Nope they’re leaving the card market entirely. Seems very risky since cards are 80% of their revenue.Hope they start making AMD cards then.
I think if you were ever considering abandoning the market, now is the time to do it.
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I disagree with GN about how EVGA needs to do something soon. Speculating that as time passes, say 4yrs, their name will be less valuable. As if they will descend into obscurity. Does he even pay attention to pop culture at all, in between leaning Mandarin? Nostalgia is a huge seller. EVGA could wait 5yrs for the dust to settle, to see where the dGPU market is at that point. Then if the conditions are right, jump back in, and the crowd would go wild.
If its cheap enough, Ill deal with it. Ive never stressed one to death and never needed a warranty. In fact every one I have purchased in the past was used. But I am happy to buy a brand new one for a change at a used price.Idk that choosing to give up "80% of the companies business" without having a solid plan-b in place was a wise decision... time will tell!
Personally I would no longer buy any EVGA product that might need warranty support down the road because I doubt they are going to be around at all in a couple years.
As I mentioned previously in another thread, I loved EVGA at one point and would only buy Nvidia GPU's from them due to the excellent warranty and support.
The bad news is EVGA cards NEEDED that warranty/support... awhile back I made a list of all the "failures" I've personally had with their stuff and we're talking a 25% +/- failure-rate for their cards!
They always made good and replaced them when they crapped the bad but still!
WOW! End of an era.
Kinda think that "the merge" had something to do with this decision as well.
If its cheap enough, Ill deal with it. Ive never stressed one to death and never needed a warranty. In fact every one I have purchased in the past was used. But I am happy to buy a brand new one for a change at a used price.
Wow, and so many say EVGA is the creme of the crop for durability. Looks like they were nothing but trouble for youMy backup PC is currently running an EVGA GTX-1650 Super that's "grandfathered" to a lifetime warranty from my original 8800-GTX which suddenly died while gaming. (in a very well-cooled case with a 700 watt Corsair PSU)
First warranty replacement was a GTX-550ti which ALSO suddenly died while gaming (in a different PC), then they sent a GTX-950 to replace it but it had problems waking up properly so I ended with the 1650.
I've also had five low-end EVGA cards fail in systems I built for my friends company (mostly GT-710's) because he needed dual monitor support. I replaced them with the same card but an ASUS version and not so much as a hiccup since
When you hit the iceberg, do you hope you can bail fast enough to keep it afloat, or abandon ship? They are evidently losing $100s on every high end card they sell. That isn't a sustainable business model. Why stay in a biz with razor thin margins in good times, that is entering a huge downturn?Idk that choosing to give up "80% of the companies business" without having a solid plan-b in place was a wise decision... time will tell!
Also, based on previous experience with them, if they have a socket AM5 motherboard, I may snatch it right away. And my last 10 PSU's have been with them.I think if you were ever considering abandoning the market, now is the time to do it.
View attachment 67709
I disagree with GN about how EVGA needs to do something soon. Speculating that as time passes, say 4yrs, their name will be less valuable. As if they will descend into obscurity. Does he even pay attention to pop culture at all, in between leaning Mandarin? Nostalgia is a huge seller. EVGA could wait 5yrs for the dust to settle, to see where the dGPU market is at that point. Then if the conditions are right, jump back in, and the crowd would go wild.
Wow, and so many say EVGA is the creme of the crop for durability. Looks like they were nothing but trouble for you
I dont quite understand why they are losing hundreds on end of the run stock. Dealers selling cars for thousands, even tens of thousands off to get rid of end of model year vehicles to clear space for the new models and recoup the money to invest in the new models. How much did the video card makers make during the past several years of the mining boom? Isnt it now just time to clear out the rest of the old cards which undoubtedly have much higher profit margins to shave off? Even at a loss?When you hit the iceberg, do you hope you can bail fast enough to keep it afloat, or abandon ship? They are evidently losing $100s on every high end card they sell. That isn't a sustainable business model. Why stay in a biz with razor thin margins in good times, that is entering a huge downturn?
Apples and oranges... Have you noticed that its hard to buy a new car right now ? Know why Carvana and the like are booming in used cars ? The makers can't get the chips for new cars. Some are building up to a point then letting the cars sit until they can put in all the chips needed. If you want to order a car you probably will pay as much as 10-20,000 over MSRP. If you find one on the lot, only a couple thousand over MSRP.I dont quite understand why they are losing hundreds on end of the run stock. Dealers selling cars for thousands, even tens of thousands off to get rid of end of model year vehicles to clear space for the new models and recoup the money to invest in the new models. How much did the video card makers make during the past several years of the mining boom? Isnt it now just time to clear out the rest of the old cards which undoubtedly have much higher profit margins to shave off? Even at a loss?
When you hit the iceberg, do you hope you can bail fast enough to keep it afloat, or abandon ship? They are evidently losing $100s on every high end card they sell. That isn't a sustainable business model. Why stay in a biz with razor thin margins in good times, that is entering a huge downturn?