One of the most important makers of Nvidia-based graphics cards won't be making them anymore: EVGA has decided not to produce video cards with Nvidia's next ...
"We've had a great partnership with EVGA over the years and will continue to support them on our current generation of products," said an Nvidia representative. "Also, EVGA would like to say thank you to our great community for the many years of support and enthusiasm for EVGA graphics cards." Peddie and Gamers Nexus also say that EVGA was frustrated by Nvidia undercutting its cards with its own Founders Editions. Graphics cards are reportedly 80% of EVGA's current business, but that doesn't mean it plans to close up shop because of its split with Nvidia—it told Gamers Nexus that it doesn't even have layoffs planned. The news is even bigger than that, though: Speaking to [Gamers Nexus](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cV9QES-FUAM) (opens in new tab), EVGA CEO Andrew Han said that the California-based company isn't just skipping the next generation of Nvidia chips, but will "completely stop" making graphics cards going forward. EVGA's decision is the result of frustration over its treatment by Nvidia, according to both sources; it's "about respect," Gamers Nexus said.
EVGA, often considered Nvidia's top add-in-board partner, is making a drastic shift. It's done doing business with Nvidia and will stop making GPUs ...
Peddie notes that as GPUs require more and more electricity, EVGA may be able to sell individuals and OEMs power supplies to make up for some of the profits. It's not a huge company, and while the GamersNexus video suggests Han said he wants to take care of employees, it's unclear what some of these engineers will have to do. "We’ve had a great partnership with EVGA over the years and will continue to support them on our current generation of products," Bryan Del Rizzo, director of global public relations for GeForce at Nvidia told Tom's Hardware. Also, EVGA would like to say thank you to our great community for the many years of support and enthusiasm for EVGA graphics cards." EVGA will reportedly continue the existing RTX 30-series product line until it runs out of stock. "EVGA has decided not to carry the next gen."
Consequently, NVIDIA is losing their largest add-in board (AIB) in North America, and the broader North American video card market is losing one of its biggest ...
And now for something that no one saw coming: EVGA, one of the most prominent third-party PC graphics card manufacturers, and a favourite brand among.
Nvidia reportedly refused to reveal basic pre-launch information about its PC graphics card to partners like EVGA, making it diffcult for them to prepare.
The news could shake up the video card industry, considering EVGA and NVIDIA have been partnered for years to produce sought-after hardware. Gamers Nexus said ...
EVGA will also not be partnering with AMD or Intel to continue making graphic cards, and is expected to exit the business entirely by the end of the year ...
This also means we will not see EVGA produce Nvidia’s upcoming RTX 40-series GPUs. Popular graphics card maker EVGA has revealed that it will no longer work with Nvidia to produce new graphics cards. However, as things stand, the current batch of EVGA GPUs are set to be the brand’s last.
EVGA has terminated its partnership with Nvidia and some reports cite “disrespectful treatment” as the reasoning.
EVGA says that it will continue to do business and there are no plans to terminate any employee contracts. The statement continues to clarify that EVGA will continue to support and sell “current generation products.” Once EVGA sells its stock of cards, according to Gamers Nexus there will be no more EVGA GPUs.
The next time you build a gaming PC, you probably won't be adding an EVGA GPU to your list of possible components. The company, which is best known for ...
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The next time you build a gaming PC, you probably won't be adding an EVGA GPU to your list of possible components. The company, which is best known for ...
Click here to find out more about our partners. Find out more about how we use your information in our Privacy Policy and Cookie Policy. You can select 'Manage settings' for more information and to manage your choices.
In an exclusive report, EVGA told Gamers Nexus that it won't sell Nvidia graphics cards after the RTX 30 series. The company will keep supporting current ...
EVGA CEO and founder Andrew Han said the decision to leave Nvidia was easy, and that working with the company was hard. Furthermore, the company doesn't sell AMD or Intel cards and doesn't intend to after splitting with Nvidia. The GPU maker also enforces price floors and ceilings, restricting EVGA's ability to price its variants according to how it customizes overclocking or cooling systems. Possibly heralding the end of EVGA, the decision could bring closer attention to the business interactions between GPU makers and board partners. Board manufacturers like EVGA say they can't absorb these shocks the way Nvidia can, and EVGA says it is losing hundreds of dollars on every RTX 3080 or RTX 3090 sold. A hot potato: The relationship between Nvidia and one of its top board partners seems to have reached a breaking point.