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GPU News

Today’s Top GPU Stories

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Memory Crisis Drives February Price Hikes

Board partners are being prepped for GPU price increases tied to rising DRAM costs, with the first wave landing between January and February 2026 MSI. Memory costs now account for nearly 80% of a GPU’s total manufacturing cost GamersNexus, forcing both AMD and NVIDIA to pass these expenses to consumers. Under previous supply agreements, memory procurement prices were fixed through 2025, but starting in 2026 those contracts ended MSI, triggering an immediate pricing impact. AMD’s Radeon cards saw initial increases this month, with NVIDIA’s GeForce lineup expected to follow suit throughout February and beyond.

AMD Shifts Focus to 8GB Cards Amid Supply Constraints

AMD is shifting its Radeon focus to 8GB graphics cards for 2026, concentrating production on the Radeon RX 9060 XT and RX 7650 GRE PCWorld. The company significantly reduced production of the baseline Radeon RX 9070 while maintaining availability of the flagship 9070 XT for partners who can secure 16GB configurations. A 5-10% price increase for Radeon GPUs occurred in January for AMD’s AIB partners, with another increase expected as early as this month or by March PCWorld. This strategic pivot reflects the ongoing memory shortage’s impact on product planning across the entire GPU industry.

NVIDIA Unveils DLSS 4.5 at CES 2026

NVIDIA announced DLSS 4.5 at CES 2026, introducing a second-generation transformer model for Super Resolution with state-of-the-art image quality and 6X Dynamic Multi Frame Generation CNBC. All GeForce RTX owners can upgrade to DLSS 4.5 Super Resolution immediately through the NVIDIA app, while 6X Dynamic Multi Frame Generation will be released for GeForce RTX 50 Series GPUs this spring CNBC. The technology enables smooth 240+ FPS gaming at 4K with path tracing, representing NVIDIA’s continued software innovation even as hardware pricing pressures mount.

Filed Under: GPU News

GPU News

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The GPU landscape in early 2026 is currently defined by a “memory crisis” that has shifted the focus from exciting new hardware to soaring prices and supply constraints. While the NVIDIA RTX 50-series and AMD RX 9000-series are out, the market is feeling the squeeze from the AI boom.

The Headlines: Price Hikes and Shortages

  • The “RAMpocalypse”: High demand for AI data center components has caused a global shortage of VRAM (specifically GDDR7 and GDDR6). Reports indicate memory now accounts for nearly 80% of a GPU’s manufacturing cost.
  • Phased Price Increases: Both NVIDIA and AMD are expected to implement monthly price hikes throughout Q1 2026. High-end cards like the RTX 5090 are already seeing street prices climb toward $3,000–$5,000.
  • Supply Cuts: NVIDIA has reportedly cut production of mid-range cards like the RTX 5070 and 5060 Ti by up to 40% to prioritize the more profitable AI enterprise chips.

Manufacturer Updates

NVIDIA (Blackwell)

NVIDIA skipped new GPU announcements at CES 2026 for the first time in years.

  • RTX 50-series SUPER: Currently delayed or indefinitely postponed. Rumors suggest NVIDIA won’t refresh the Blackwell lineup until AMD poses a greater threat in the high-end market.
  • Current Flagship: The RTX 5090 (32GB GDDR7) remains the performance king, but availability is extremely limited.
  • Feature Focus: The focus has shifted to DLSS 4.5, which brings further refinements to neural rendering and frame generation.

AMD (RDNA 4)

AMD’s Radeon RX 9000-series (formerly rumored as RX 8000) is the current alternative, focusing on value and rasterization.

  • RX 9070 XT & 9060 XT: These are the primary current-gen offerings. AMD has managed to stay slightly more price-competitive by sticking with GDDR6 memory rather than the scarcer GDDR7.
  • VRAM Strategy: AMD is reportedly prioritizing 8GB models of their mid-range cards to keep prices closer to MSRP while memory costs remain high.

Intel (Battlemage)

  • Arc B770 Cancelled: In a disappointing turn for budget builders, the high-end “Big Battlemage” (B770) was reportedly shelved due to financial viability.
  • Workstation Shift: The BMG-G31 die intended for the B770 is being repurposed into the Arc Pro B70, a workstation card with 32GB of VRAM launching this quarter.
  • Mainstream Success: The Arc B580 remains one of the few “best value” cards under $300 currently available.

Filed Under: GPU News

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