AMD has decided to switch to a new business model focusing on customer scalability rather than competing in the flagship GPU segment.
Rumors surrounding AMD's RDNA 4 lineup claimed that the company wouldn't be going the enthusiast route with its upcoming Radeon RX 8000 "RDNA 4" GPU family, as one of the high-end Navi chips, the Navi 4C/4X got canceled during the mid-development cycle. It was supposed that Team Red had shifted its focus over to the large portion of the markets, including releasing SKUs that focused on catering to the low-to-mid segment of the industry, and now, statements by AMD's SvP and GM of the Computing and Graphics Business Group Jack Huynh, has verified this particular stance.
AMD has been involved in a race with NVIDIA in the GPU markets for quite a long now, and both companies have focused on marketing their respective portfolios as one of the most capable ones out there. Even in keynotes, we often see the flagship models, such as the Radeon RX 7900 XTX and the GeForce RTX 4090, getting more showtime, but this does put the other variants in the lineup under the shadow, and consumers often conclude their views about a particular GPU series based upon how the flagship model stacks up.
AMD is now avoiding this, which is why the firm believes that it should focus on GPU scaling now, given that this particular segment holds 80% of the market share. Team Red believes that competing with NVIDIA in the enthusiastic segment isn't doing the job for them and that by switching market targets, the firm can perform impressively.
Huynh says that the "King of the Hill" tactic hasn't worked out for AMD, and the firm is eager to build its portfolio that revolves around being more competitive in terms of the pricing and the value being offered instead of just
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