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I think it simply shows that Radeon has chosen the wrong strategy. If they want Nvidia prices, they need Nvidia features and support. As you go high up the stack, people want DLSS 3, Ray Tracing, Reflex, Cuda all that jazz that AMD simply doesn't have. And the market share trend continues to show this that people will pay more for Nvidia because of their reputation and feature set.

Now Radeon is at the risk of losing the value segment thanks to Intel as well. When Intel is giving you 12GB of vram for $130 or A750 which is 3060 class performance for $200 with increasingly good amount of driver support, it becomes hard to justify buying Radeon in terms of value. Radeon has lost the $600-$1600 segment to Nvidia and $100-200 segment to Intel. So they are left with the $250-$500 segment where they are the obvious choice. I think they need to re-evaluate their strategy otherwise they will lose that too.



                  

PC Specs: CPU: 7800X3D || GPU: Strix 4090 || RAM: 32GB DDR5 6000 || Main SSD: WD 2TB SN850