Skip to main content

Nvidia CEO has foreboding news for PC gamers heading into 2022

After more than a year of chip shortages, prices of graphics cards continue to be highly inflated. While there are signs that imply the situation might be improving, Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, expects the shortage to continue well into 2022.

Both Nvidia and AMD have taken steps to improve their supply levels. According to Huang, Nvidia has taken steps to try to combat the current GPU shortage. Despite that, he expects that graphics cards supplies will continue to be low throughout the next year.

“Meanwhile, we have and are securing pretty significant long-term supply commitments as we expand into all these different markets initiatives that we’ve set ourselves up for. And so I think — I would expect that we will see a supply contained environment for the vast majority of next year is my guess at the moment,” said Jensen Huang.

NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang
Nvidia

Huang made similar predictions in 2020 when he stated that the demand for GPUs will outstrip the supply for all of 2021. It’s likely that this expectation will come true, as we are closing in on September and the situation continues to be dire.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

Getting one of the best graphics cards has been nearly impossible in the past months, and this applies to both AMD and Nvidia GPUs. The ongoing chip shortage drove up the prices of hardware to previously unseen heights, causing some cards to sell at over 300% of their MSRP as recently as May of this year.

We have recently seen the supplies of graphics cards beginning to normalize, allowing for prices to drop in some markets, such as Germany. However, finding one of the Nvidia RTX 30-Series cards at MSRP continues to be extremely difficult and is often limited to short sales.

Many PC builders were hopeful that the measures taken by Nvidia might impact the market in a positive way. Nvidia has confirmed that the majority of graphics cards sold in the second quarter of 2021 were cards with Lite Hash Rate limiters. The use of LHR technology makes these cards much less attractive to cryptocurrency miners, allowing the stocks to be accessed by other users. Even though these cards are not as well-suited to crypto mining, they continue to sell out in seconds after launch.

Rumors suggest that Nvidia is going to release its next generation of graphics cards, the Ada Lovelace GeForce RTX 40-Series, sometime next year. It’s possible that the company will use TSMC as their foundry, although using Samsung is still a possibility. With Intel joining the GPU market soon, and AMD also working on its next generation of cards, we can only hope that these new releases will be easier to snag than what’s currently on the market.

Editors' Recommendations

Monica J. White
Monica is a UK-based freelance writer and self-proclaimed geek. A firm believer in the "PC building is just like expensive…
You shouldn’t buy these Nvidia GPUs right now
RTX 4060 Ti sitting on a pink background.

Buying a new GPU in this generation is a bit of a tricky minefield of graphics cards to steer clear of. Sometimes, the performance is there, but the value is not; other times, you could get something much more capable for the same amount of money.

While Nvidia makes some of the best GPUs, it's certainly no stranger to that performance vs. value dilemma. Below, I'll show you three Nvidia graphics cards you're better off avoiding right now and tell you their much better alternatives.
RTX 4060 Ti

Read more
Nvidia DLSS is amazing, but only if you use it the right way
Lies of P on the KTC G42P5.

Nvidia's Deep Learning Super Sampling, or DLSS, has become a cornerstone feature of modern PC games. It started as a way to boost your performance by rendering a game at a lower resolution, but the prominence and popularity of DLSS have prompted Nvidia to add even more features under the name.

Today, DLSS incorporates several different features, all of which leverage AI to boost performance and/or image quality. It can be intimidating if you're a new RTX user, so I'm here to break down all of the increases of DLSS in 2024 and how you can best leverage it in supported games.
The many features of DLSS

Read more
Nvidia just made GeForce Now so much better
Playing games with GeForce Now on a laptop.

Nvidia has just added adaptive refresh rates to GeForce Now, its cloud gaming service. The new tech, dubbed Cloud G-Sync, works on PCs with Nvidia GPUs first and foremost , but also on Macs. These include Macs with Apple Silicon, as well as older models with Intel CPUs and AMD GPUs. On the Windows PC side more broadly, Intel and AMD GPUs will not be supported right now. Nvidia has also made one more change to GeForce Now that makes it a lot easier to try out -- it introduced day passes.

Cloud G-Sync's variable refresh rate (VRR) feature will sync your monitor's refresh rate to match the frame rates you're hitting while gaming with GeForce Now. Nvidia's new cloud solution also uses Reflex to lower latency regardless of frame rates. Enabling VRR in GeForce Now should provide a major boost by reducing screen tearing and stuttering, improving the overall gaming experience on PCs and laptops that normally can't keep up with some titles. To pull this off, Nvidia uses its proprietary RTX 4080 SuperPODs.

Read more