https://www.pcgamer.com/amd-is-ahea...-gpu-shipments-for-the-first-time-since-2013/
This does include APUs but not console chips.
AMD also gaining back market share in discrete GPUs:
I didn't expect Navi to have this much impact, tbh, didn't think it was strong enough a competitor but I guess it is strong enough that someone wanting an all AMD build can do so now if they aren't looking at the high end of the GPU spectrum. These are also more channel numbers from what I understand rather than sold through numbers so it make take a quarter or two more to see how the real market numbers shake out.
This does include APUs but not console chips.
Here's a breakdown of how things stand, versus last quarter and last year:
- AMD—17.2 percent (up 1.5 percent sequentially, up 2.4 percent YoY)
- Nvidia—16 percent (down 0.1 percent sequentially, down 1 percent YoY)
- Intel—66.9 percent (down 1.4 percent sequentially, down 1.4 percent YoY)
AMD also gaining back market share in discrete GPUs:
When looking at graphics cards for desktop PCs, AMD now accounts for nearly a third of the market, at 32.1 percent. That still leaves Nvidia with a big majority at 67.9 percent, but if we go back just one quarter, AMD was sitting at 22.7 percent. That's a 9.4 percent jump from one quarter to the next. And if we go back to the end of the 2018, Nvidia was sitting at 81.2 percent.
The split is a little more lopsided in laptops, where Nvidia's discrete GPUs hold a 74 percent share to AMD's 26 percent.
I didn't expect Navi to have this much impact, tbh, didn't think it was strong enough a competitor but I guess it is strong enough that someone wanting an all AMD build can do so now if they aren't looking at the high end of the GPU spectrum. These are also more channel numbers from what I understand rather than sold through numbers so it make take a quarter or two more to see how the real market numbers shake out.