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Remember how graphics card prices tripled several years ago, and never came back to sane prices?
Sigh.
I remember somebody stole like a whole truck of graphics cards. Stealing shit gonna be a very lucrative business as everything gets more expensive and most law enforcement are busy tackling us citizen nurses on their way to work.
Wake up babe, new Fast & Furious plot just dropped
I feel your pain :(
Yeah, but that affected only gamers, now it’s all computer nerds (corpos can switch to thin clients).
Only? That makes it seem as though gaming were a negligible fraction of the world’s entertainment time. It wouldn’t surprise me if it surpassed movies before long, if it hasn’t already.
I think I see your point though: RAM prices affect even more people than that.
I thought it surpassed it a long time ago, but I was surprised by how much:
The gaming industry has quietly become the world’s most dominant entertainment force, generating $184 billion annually — nearly double the combined revenue of movies ($33.9 billion) and music ($28.6 billion).
Edit: lol. That’s almost triple, not double. Whoever wrote that at Medium likely misinterpreted a ~200% increase to “double”.
PC gaming is about ¼ of that:
Mobile gaming is the largest segment by far – mobile games generated about $92 billion in revenue in 2024, 49% of the total market. Console games make up roughly 28% ($51B), and PC games about 23% (~$43B). (Newzoo, 2025).
But $43B is almost ⅓ more than the entire film industry. Wild.
A lot of PC gaming is happening on low-powered devices, though. About 1 in 8 PCs that participate in the Steam hardware survey have under 16GB of RAM, and the most common videocard is the laptop 4060.
(Granted, there are a lot of problems with making grand statements based on the Steam hardware survey.)
So I doubt RAM prices will impact PC games revenue too much—tonnes of games run on modest hardware, including some of the highest grossing (like Fortnite). So many amazing indie games run on a potato. Most will just use their old computer for a bit longer, or game on a laptop/console/Deck/whatever.
I’m totally happy with the Steam Deck, and play on it about 20× more than my PC (with an i5 12400, 6650XT 8GB, 1440p, and 32GB RAM—hardly beastly, but a fairly recent midrange build). 90%+ of my play time is small indie games, fwiw.
Wild that mobile gaming is 49% of the total gaming market. I would’ve guessed consoles had that footprint, and PC and mobile were the smaller markets. Sure, it’s way more accessible than PC and consoles, but that they’re also generating so much revenue (and with the majority of the games being basically slop, compared to what gamers with actual gaming hardware have).
Interesting.
Do note, though, that I said entertainment time, not entertainment industry revenue.
It must far exceed, no? Not many people are watching back-to-back films for hours, but lots of people play games for huge stretches of time. The flip of that, too: lots of people pop their phone out in small bits of downtime (or even while “watching” a film, lol.)
I have no objective evidence, but I would find it easy to believe.
I’m more curious about how the hours spent watching movies and TV shows combined compare to the hours spent on video games, and how the two are changing over time in various countries.
Thin clients still require ram and storage at the terminals and lots of both at the server. If a thin client deployment is not already in place, it will be a huge financial burden for corporations from hardware deployment as well as time lost to employees learning process changes. This is the exact reason large organizations slow roll deployments instead of making fast changes.
If it stays high it well affect everything that uses RAM.
Oh no, my fridge!!!
I love GN for what they do, but I just can’t get into the video format for tech hardware news or reviews.
For some topics, I totally understand the strength of the video format, but for others it just doesn’t make sense to me. A review is much quicker to process with commentary text and relevant charts for benchmarking. I would argue the same for less in-depth news and analysis.
I also wish GN had a peetrube channel!
They also have a website with a written report for most videos, like this one for the Linux benchmarking video: https://gamersnexus.net/gpus/rip-windows-linux-gpu-gaming-benchmarks-bazzite
I know, most of their content isn’t published in text form though.
Used to be the other way around, their more detailed reviews were on the website, again Steve doing the writing, YT being more of a complimentary channel. But I guess once the YT channel started to take off, he saw the hard cold truth that it just gathers way more attention and gradually focused less on the text reviews.
Tbh I preferred their website more, gave me the option to read it at my own pace, and focus on the parts I care most about, not fiddle with forward and rewind on YT, and having to pause to look at the charts in more detail and peace from the cosntant commentary track.
Tbh I preferred their website more, gave me the option to read it at my own pace, and focus on the parts I care most about, not fiddle with forward and rewind on YT, and having to pause to look at the charts in more detail and peace from the cosntant commentary track.
That’s exactly why I prefer written articles, they are more concise and quicker to process. That being said, when I do watch GN videos I do find their sarcastic style to be entertaining.
Is there an actual incentive for any for-profit channel to have a peertube channel? It seems like it would just reduce engagement that they actually get paid for.
You could still do sponsorships and Patreon, which for quite a few YouTubers are the main revenue sources. But of course if viewers don’t demand it there is no incentive to switch either.
Couldn’t they do both YouTube and another means of distribution?
It would most likely still mean less engagement overall. YouTube recommendations are strongly based on interactions and momentum. If part of your core fanbase watches & interacts on other platforms, you’re recommended to fewer people outside your fanbase, so over time your viewership shrinks.
Unless they’re getting paid directly, like through something like Nebula or their own service like a Dropout or Viva sort of thing, why wouldn’t they want their views to be somewhere that drives more meaningful numbers? Peertube isn’t going to bring them new users, and from what I’ve seen a lot of what’s on peertube seems to just be unauthorized reposts that pull away views.
Like, if I enjoy a creator who’s on YouTube, I’m not going to watch their stuff somewhere that doesn’t give them any meaningful recognition. Something like Patreon is great, but driving up their numbers on Peertube isn’t going to bring them to a wider audience the way driving up their engagement on YouTube would, and those numbers bring more people to their Patreon.
Why do work for free. Are you willing to pay for it? Or do you work for free?
FWIW, I do subscribe/scheduled donate to media sources (news/tech) and some YT content (not GN, because of the aforementioned preference for text, I only watch some of their videos).
Should GN move to PeerTube, I would consider a scheduled donation subscription purely to help kickstart the ecosystem.
I strongly believe that subscriptions/scheduled donation are the best way forward for media. Simple focus on sources that one uses regularly (more than once a week).
The best reason to watch his very long videos is if you like his specific kinda sarcasm and energy. Which, I do, but it is very whiny.
Yeah I agree. I love GN for what they do but I never watch their videos because I find the formats quite bad. Too long, boring, and designed so you can’t just skip to the end like HUB for example.
What’s up fellow video hater?
Let me make a wild guess - you are over the age of 35, am I correct?
How did you guess? :)
I like him and the format, am over 35. 🙋♂️
The explanation from this article made more sense to me: Sam Altman’s Dirty DRAM Deal, than DRAM manufacturers colluding to decommoditize PC computing.
That is not to say they did not willingly take advantage of the situation, they definitely did.
I also agree with GN that micron taking public money and then doing something against the public interest is a bad thing.
“corrupt industry” is a bit redundant, isn’t it?
Show me an industry that isn’t built, from foundation to the tip of the pyramid, out of blocks of condensed corruption. Show me one that has not perpetrated unimaginable horrors on uncountable numbers of humans for generations.
Hmmmm, maybe like the medical device startup industry?
I did electronics prototyping for a number of years with a lot of medical device startups and pretty most of them genuinely just wanted to help peoples’ quality of life.
That’s not really an industry though. Industry is established. A startup is by definition not that. Start ups very quickly follow in their parents footsteps or are bought out.
OPEC : 1973 :: JEDEC : 2025
Corrupted memory? Happens a lot with my RAM. How unfortunate their memory has corrupted.
Thank you for including the YouTube link so that my phone will properly open in libretube









