DrMrLordX
Lifer
- Apr 27, 2000
- 22,939
- 13,024
- 136
nV said they were going to work on it, right? I don't get this style thread, reads like a clickbait youtube video
How long do they get before people declare it a failure? Honest question. Keep in mind that AMD fans are constantly saying that their GCN dGPUs get "better with time". I won't defend or criticize the claim, but the basic idea is that driver updates improve the product, sometimes a year or more after release. Is it reasonable for people to buy a product with the expectation that it'll take a year or longer (or in the case of NGG, never) to squeeze optimal performance from the product? Are we going to start saying that about nVidia's cards too?
At this point I think everyone, especially on this forum, knows nV overstated and overpriced this generation. AMD dropped the ball with VII too, in my opinion.
I don't think AMD overstated anything. Their product is clearly not a consumer-oriented card anyway. I would agree that they did overall underdeliver, unless all you want is cheap fp64 performance.
I think there is a larger discussion that needs to be had about the future of the dGPU and the lack of titles worth buying a shiny new GPU for. I think us consumers, pro-users, enthusiasts, etc. need to step back and re-evaluate what kind of card WE want to buy rather than being told by AMD/nV new tech justifies charging twice as much as last gen.
And willingly paying for it
We are hostages. Both AMD and nVidia have tasted the sweet nectar of profits from pro graphics applications. It's quite lucrative. Try explaining why they should sell us dGPUs at anything but the console level anymore. It doesn't make any sense for their wallets. If the enthusiast community refuses to buy their overpriced halo cards for $700 or $999 or $1200 or more (ugh) then, in the long run, we're only signaling to them that it's not worth it to serve the consumer market.