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2[H]4U
- Joined
- Dec 24, 2014
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- 2,455
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Kinda irrelevant with Super's comming![]()
You greatly underestimate the PC market...and the profit margins in that segment...
First, I never mentioned profit margins. I mentioned image quality and how 150 million people don't care like you care about IQ. It's hard to argue that.
Second, I don't think you understand exactly how many 150 million units is compared to say 2080Ti sales. I can't imagine that Nvidia shipped 1 million units worldwide since release (and that's probably being generous). It's that niche of a product. Even if you combine all the flagship card sales since the release of the PS4/XB1 you might get to 1% of 150 million. The sheer volume makes up for the lack of profit margins in consoles.
Navi discussion thread is the title![]()
I wonder how well Navi mines?
Hmm may have to buy several of them maybe.
Argument ad numerum...a fallacy.
Besides, you say they don't care...but have not mapped out the demographics and their available funds....so you are stacking fallacy on fallacy here
To bad NVIDIA and AMD's financial report don't jive with your alternate version of reality.
Making money for R&D is vital...and how come NVIDIA is making more money than AMD...despite the "150 million people owning a console"...see the non-value of that fallacy?
Then why did he bring NVIDIA cards into the graph?![]()
No way in hell I would settle for Console-performance/Image quality (or lack thereof)....
Streaming will replace PC gaming... anyone that thinks otherwise is kidding themselves.
Gaming industry is a lucrative market and google wants a piece of that pie. I just don't think it will ever replace the pc. It will coexist offering games that are made for the streaming industry proving that as you mentioned they will look great, but will be far from what will be possible on Pc. Ubisoft, EA … all of the big publishers will not leave the pc market. There is way too much money on the table. Google as big and wealthy as they are will not take over . Neither will Amazon or whoever else that has seemingly endless piles of $.
Developers will continue as usual simply because consoles are not going anywhere and they are always behind PC in terms of what,s possible
Vega had some very unique features that is now going to be used by Goggle Stadia.
Nah, it'll replace console gaming. There will always be a market for a 'higher end' with better response times.
Streaming will replace PC gaming... anyone that thinks otherwise is kidding themselves.
The high end GPU market has no long term viability. Intel and AMD know that... there is no point in trying to chase a silly king of the pile crown today. In 4 or 5 years it will be a completely dead market. There will still be top of the line GPUs of course but they will be aimed at workstation use first and as such will cost people even more. We have already seen high end pricing drift up... and that trend is not going to stop. AMD nor Intel is going to release a high end performing card and price it 100s of dollars cheaper. They are fine with those prices drifting up.. and we will get mid range cards from both and that is all. AMD is selling GPU server blades and... people not being able to afford high end rigs helps sell those. Intel I have no doubt will be looking for a big cloud streaming partner as well. I would very much expect Amazon to get in the game and I wouldn't be shocked if they announce they will be using Intels GPUs.
What the "but the LAG!!!" people are forgetting is game publishers decide what games are made >.< Game publishers WANT streaming to happen... its the ultimate DRM. Game developers themselves are being sold on the freedom they gain by not having to target 5 year old hardware all the time. Game designers have ALWAYS been held back by having to target a wide range of hardware so they can actually sell copies and stay in business. Cryis is the biggest example of what happens if you screw up and target high end hardware goals at launch. Only a few people end up being your potential market and your big expensive game doesn't sell.
So if you love twitch games.... get used to not seeing them anymore. Publishers are NOT looking for new twich properties right now. And developers looking to get funding are not trying to sell them either. I would expect the next 5 or so years we are going to see some of the most insanely wonderful traced games you can imagine (that home hardware simply won't be able to run). They won't however be first person shooters. They will be games that don't feature super twitch based game play. Then sometime around the mid 2020s-2030 expect a new wave of twitch shooters when the streaming backbone has matured.
Like it or not the big AAA publishers and developers are going to lean into the streaming stuff hard. Google won't be the last big name to announce game streaming.
Because that's currently what's out and available and has performance information available, can't extrapolate off of cards that haven't been officially announced with no performance data. This is a thread about Navi and I'm just trying to figure out where it will land based on what has been officially said.
Thread is not about super.
Bye.
Streaming will be the high end. Like it or not... things like Real time ray tracing are never going to really work well on home hardware. Streaming is going to be able to give you 60fps solid with ray tracing cranked to 11.
Lets all be honest there is only really one card capable of delivering 4k 60fps with current minimal levels of Ray tracing... and it retails for $1200. Anything less can't deliver 4k/60.
Which features? I would be interested to learn more about any specific advantage Vega or Navi has in cloud server deployments.
Oh you found a way to solve the problem that has stopped streaming games form working before?
Please do tell...I would like to hear all about the Nobel price in physics for breaking the speed of light?![]()
Like it or not... things like Real time ray tracing are never going to really work well on home hardware.
That is almost signature worthy...for the lulz.
Never? Wow.
GPU performance increased ~30x in the last 12 years. How far away is never ?
But it is about the 2060, 2070, 2080 and 2080 Ti?
Can't eat your cake and have it too![]()
By this stretch of imagination. What is stopping Development studios to tell the big publishers to fuck off. It ain't that big of a deal to publish games now. Epic just realized that...![]()
And uhm who's going to pay for the hardware time?You want to use 500 GB of textures... go for it. You want to really integrate Ray tracing as more then just a potential extra eye candy tick box.
So by your predictions video games (AAA anyway) will be dead in five years time?
Show me even a 2080ti running any current tracing game at 4k with ultra settings and max tracing turned at anything over 30FPS average.
I'll wait.
I don't expect the next generation will be any better. Streaming is going to be the platform that will bring 4k full ray traced content at 60fps to market first. I don't expect any consumer level GPU will be able to match that for years if ever. (as its more likely the masses will move to streaming before its possible.)
I don't think you're wrong about streaming being the wave of the future but until bandwidth restrictions (be that lag or caps or even being able to have internet service) disappear there will be a desire to not stream everything.
I own many CDs; I subscribe to a streaming service so I can try out new music before I commit to a purchase. Games, other than WoW and Diablo, we don't play any streaming games (and even those two are a stretch with three bandwidth addicted adults in the house).
And uhm who's going to pay for the hardware time?
I don't think you're wrong about streaming being the wave of the future but until bandwidth restrictions (be that lag or caps or even being able to have internet service) disappear there will be a desire to not stream everything.
I own many CDs; I subscribe to a streaming service so I can try out new music before I commit to a purchase. Games, other than WoW and Diablo, we don't play any streaming games (and even those two are a stretch with three bandwidth addicted adults in the house).