GeForce GPUs are 80% of EVGA’s revenue—but it’s cutting ties with Nvidia anyway

GeForce GPUs are 80% of EVGA’s revenue—but it’s cutting ties with Nvidia anyway

2 years ago
Anonymous $CIOZ56dzxX

https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2022/09/gpu-manufacturer-evga-splits-with-longtime-partner-nvidia-exiting-gpu-market/

Graphics card manufacturer eVGA has made a name for itself manufacturing and selling Nvidia's GeForce GPUs for two decades, including some of the more attractively priced options on the market. But according to the YouTubers at Gamers Nexus, analyst Jon Peddie, and an EVGA forum post, EVGA is officially terminating its relationship with Nvidia and will not be manufacturing cards based on the company's RTX 4000-series GPUs.

EVGA's graphics cards have exclusively used Nvidia GPUs since its founding in 1999, and according to Gamers Nexus, GeForce sales represent 80 percent of EVGA's revenue, making this a momentous and arguably company-endangering change. But EVGA CEO Andrew Han told Gamers Nexus that the decision was about "principle" rather than financials—Han complained about a lack of communication from Nvidia about new products, including information about pricing and availability.

GeForce GPUs are 80% of EVGA’s revenue—but it’s cutting ties with Nvidia anyway

Sep 16, 2022, 9:23pm UTC
https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2022/09/gpu-manufacturer-evga-splits-with-longtime-partner-nvidia-exiting-gpu-market/ > Graphics card manufacturer eVGA has made a name for itself manufacturing and selling Nvidia's GeForce GPUs for two decades, including some of the more attractively priced options on the market. But according to the YouTubers at Gamers Nexus, analyst Jon Peddie, and an EVGA forum post, EVGA is officially terminating its relationship with Nvidia and will not be manufacturing cards based on the company's RTX 4000-series GPUs. > EVGA's graphics cards have exclusively used Nvidia GPUs since its founding in 1999, and according to Gamers Nexus, GeForce sales represent 80 percent of EVGA's revenue, making this a momentous and arguably company-endangering change. But EVGA CEO Andrew Han told Gamers Nexus that the decision was about "principle" rather than financials—Han complained about a lack of communication from Nvidia about new products, including information about pricing and availability.