LightningZ71
Platinum Member
- Mar 10, 2017
- 2,147
- 2,599
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In a market that is essentially controlled by a duopoly (AMD and NVIDIA) to gain ANY traction, which includes programmer and developer mindshare as well as customers willing to try your new thing, you ABSOLUTELY HAVE TO sell at a loss to provide maximum value to customers to then have enough critical installation numbers to justify anyone giving a care about performance on your products.
Intel HAS to burn cash to gain a foothold in the market. They have zero choice. They can't chase the bottom end for numbers because their own iGPUs as well as AMD's are gutting that market at the same time. The $199-$259 area is where the battlefield is. 12GB with 4060 range performance is a solid target as you hit NVIDIA where they are most stingy (VRAM) as well as undercutting AMD on price (which is where AMD draws it's market).
Buyers don't care how much the silicon costs. They just know what performance level they can afford.
Intel HAS to burn cash to gain a foothold in the market. They have zero choice. They can't chase the bottom end for numbers because their own iGPUs as well as AMD's are gutting that market at the same time. The $199-$259 area is where the battlefield is. 12GB with 4060 range performance is a solid target as you hit NVIDIA where they are most stingy (VRAM) as well as undercutting AMD on price (which is where AMD draws it's market).
Buyers don't care how much the silicon costs. They just know what performance level they can afford.