this post was submitted on 05 Aug 2023
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High-end cards are also in an arms race for performance at the expense of power consumption, whereas "mid-range" is still pretty powerful. A low-end RX 6600 from 2021 performs the same as the nVidia GTX 1080 that came out 5 years before it and still seems to perform well at FHD with more modern games.
In this article, AMD mentioned they didn't make a competitor to the 4090 since it would be a power and cost hog:
When this article launched, the sentiment on Reddit was that it was "copium" from AMD but it sounds like they are owning the fact they couldn't scale with price and power to compete with nVidia. Maybe AMD's definition of "mid-range" is going to be simply the modest generation-over-generation performance increases previously seen. The high-end GPU market reminds me of the frequency wars that Intel pulled with the NetBurst architecture, which was high performance at the expense of high power consumption. That ended when Intel went back to (initially) slower clock speeds with the Core era.