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Aurornisyesterday at 5:37 PM3 repliesview on HN

> Gone are the days of affordable graphics accelerators in the $300 to $500 range. Now it’s $1000 to $2000.

What are you talking about? nVidia only has two models in the $1000 to $2000 range and they’re clearly premium parts.

The $300 to $500 cards are actually fine for normal gaming unless you demand to play at 4K at high settings.


Replies

autoexecyesterday at 5:59 PM

> The $300 to $500 cards are actually fine for normal gaming unless you demand to play at 4K at high settings.

I don't think that wanting to play games at the native resolution of your screen without changing settings from their defaults in order to make the game look and perform much worse is a very unreasonable "demand".

That used to be possible without spending as much money and it's also not unreasonable for people to point that out

show 2 replies
array_key_firstyesterday at 7:20 PM

Pretty much all the lower price cards are a bad buy. Nvidia is only competitive on performance at the absolute top end, where they have no competitors. In every other price bracket they lose to AMD and Intel.

JasonSageyesterday at 5:48 PM

You're right.

People want to pretend fundamentals of economics don't exist AND the company has moral obligations to fulfill to consumers. It's laughable.

It's not just nVidia, I've seen other expensive consumer brands getting the same sentiments.