This isn't the most surprising revelation, but the numbers are still eye popping. According to long-time graphics market soothsayers JPR(opens in new tab), graphics card shipments dropped from 26 million in the last quarter of 2021 to 13 million for the same period last year.
That's an epic 50% drop, year-on-year. Admittedly, the final quarter of last year didn't fully see the benefit of Nvidia and AMD's new GPU launches. Nvidia's new RTX 40-series only appeared in mid October, with the marginally more mainstream RTX 4070 Ti(opens in new tab) not rolling out until early this year.
Likewise, AMD's RX 7900 series, led by the AMD RX 7900 XTX(opens in new tab), were only released in mid December, so will barely feature in the numbers at all. But those caveats aside, we are still looking at a precipitous drop in GPU numbers at the end of last year versus the same quarter in 2021.
We've documented the reasons why often enough before. 2020 and 2021 saw a perfect storm of demand driven by rampant ethereum mining on GPUs, pent up demand from a disappointing previous generation of GPUs from Nvidia and AMD, and finally the distortions of stay-at-home directives during the pandemic.
The total net result of which was an explosion in demand for Nvidia's RTX 30-series and AMD RX 6000 GPUs(opens in new tab) and prices increasing to multiples of the recommended retail figure for an extended period.
Overall sales of GPUs fell by 38% over the same period, but that includes integrated and embedded GPUs, neither of which are usually gaming relevant. You do get the odd exception, such as the Steam Deck's integrated graphics.
If that all sounds like bad news, there was a small uptick in discrete graphics card sales of 7.8% from Q3 to Q4 2022.
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