Nvidia is reportedly diverting some desktop GPU manufacturing to keep the notebook market fed in China. That is according to a (via ) [[link]] which claims gaming laptop manufacturers have been increasing their demands for the green team's mobile graphics chips.
The desktop DIY market for graphics cards is supposedly in a fairly robust state, and so the report suggests Nvidia isn't increasing production capacity and is simply pushing its Ada Lovelace GPUs over to the notebook makers instead of desktop manufacturing.
The expectation is that this would be around the RTX 4060 and RTX 4070 level of GPU, though given the machine translation it's not clear whether that refers specifically to desktop or mobile as they use different GPUs. The RTX 4070 in laptop land uses the same chip as the desktop RTX 4060 Ti, though the RTX 4060 is specced identically whichever platform you're running it on.
The cynic would say that this could be a possible move by Nvidia to maintain the high prices of its current range of graphics cards. The general consensus about the RTX 40-series is that they're good cards, just priced well above the odds. And with ample supply of these cards, and limited demand owing to the comparative pricing increase over the previous generation, there have been some retailers offering deals on select cards in order to increase sales.
If there is restricted supply, however, and fewer options to buy in the channel then it's easier for GPU manufacturers and Nvidia itself to maintain those high prices.
There were reports after the launch of the that it was , but if Nvidia did indeed cut its manufacturing that hasn't had a material impact on the number of [[link]] cards on sale.
Still, I wouldn't worry that we're on the cusp of another GPU shortage. If Nvidia is indeed altering the flow of GPUs from desktop to notebook, then that is likely a natural restructuring based on inventory and market demands. And it's quite possibly not a global thing, either. The report purely talks about the China market, and there may well not be any change in supply on a worldwide basis.
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I do wonder if we might get a bit of a price correction in the coming months, however. AMD is set to launch its new mainstream graphics cards—potentially in September after a late August announcement—and I would expect it to compete primarily in terms of pricing. Just as AMD chose to undercut the with its release, it's looking likely that it will try and do the same to the RTX 4070 with its upcoming RX 7800 GPU.
With the RTX 4070 costing $599, the rumours have the RX 7800 set to launch around $549 at most, and in certain gaming benchmarks.
I wouldn't be at all surprised to see [[link]] Nvidia try to spoil AMD's upcoming announcement of a new RDNA 3 graphics card or two by announcing a relatively significant drop in price for its own mid-range GPUs.
That would be nice, wouldn't it?