Skip to main content

Finally, budget GPUs from AMD and Nvidia are a reality again

Nvidia and AMD announced new budget graphics cards at CES 2022: The $199 RX 6500 XT for AMD, and the $249 RTX 3050 for Nvidia. Even with rumors of these cards floating around, I didn’t expect to actually see them — and I didn’t expect AMD and Nvidia to price them around $200.

Prices of graphics cards have been going up, and over the past few generations, Nvidia and AMD have continued to distance their mainline products from their budget offerings. CES 2022 forced AMD and Nvidia to reckon with the current prices of graphics cards, and the RX 6500 XT and RTX 3050 seem like a winning pair in a time when graphics options are few and far between.

Confronting the GPU shortage

Jeff Fisher presenting the RTX 3090 Ti.
RTX 3090 Ti? Who can afford that? Image used with permission by copyright holder

Nvidia never released an RTX 2050, at least not on desktop. The company stuck with the $329 RTX 2060 as its cheapest card from the previous generation, letting the older GTX 10-series and 16-series GPUs fill in the gap for the budget crowd. AMD had an RX 5500 XT last generation, but that was before AMD had flagships that could compete with Nvidia’s best.

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

Both Nvidia and AMD have had budget options over the past few years — the RX 500 cards for AMD and GTX 16-series for Nvidia — but they never matched up to the mainline cards. And going into the current generation of GPUs, it seemed that graphics cards around $200 were all but dead, with Nvidia and AMD asking higher prices and hopeful buyers happy to pay it.

At CES this year, AMD and Nvidia needed to address the GPU shortage that has left many machines with graphics cards that are woefully out of date. The answer: The RTX 3050 and RX 6500 XT. Priced at $249 and $199, respectively, these cards represent a shift back toward budget GPUs.

Specs for the AMD RX 6500 XT graphics card.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

You’ll pay more than list price — I’ll dig into that more next — but that doesn’t mean the price is meaningless. The older RX 500 and GTX 16-series cards are still obscenely expensive on the secondhand market. The goal with these new cards, it seems, is to offer an alternative at the same price with modern features and performance.

$200? Yeah right

OK, $200 is a pipe dream. At least for most of 2022, you can expect the RTX 3050 and RX 6500 XT to sell for much more than the what AMD and Nvidia announced at CES. Unless you can score a card on release day — I recommend waiting for third-party benchmarks before putting your money down — you’ll probably pay twice the list price and maybe more.

Listings for the RTX 3080 on eBay.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

That’s reasonably unreasonable. You can’t get any current-gen AMD or Nvidia graphics card at around $400, with the budget cards I mentioned above filling in those price points. The RX 5500 XT, RX 580, and GTX 1660 aren’t bad graphics cards, but they aren’t the best options in 2022.

Performance-wise, the newer RDNA 2 architecture on AMD and Ampere architecture on Nvidia promise much higher frame rates overall, but that’s not what has me excited. The RTX 3050 and RX 6500 XT support hardware-accelerated ray tracing and, critically, the RTX 3050 supports Nvidia Deep Learning Super Sampling (DLSS).

It’s not a secret that I’m a big fan of DLSS. Since the start of GPU shortage, the problem has been that only a select few, expensive graphics cards could use it. AMD’s FidelityFX Super Resolution is an alternative, but it doesn’t look nearly as good as DLSS.

CoD Warzone running with and without DLSS enabled.
Nvidia

I’m not expecting earth-shattering performance out of these cards, and you shouldn’t either. But even at twice list price, the RTX 3050 and RX 6500 XT offer graphics options that are sorely lacking in the market right now. Even if performance is exactly what we expect given what we’ve seen from other current-gen options, that’s fine.

No good options, only better ones

AMD RX 6600 among other graphics cards.
Jacob Roach / Digital Trends

There are no good options when it comes to the GPU shortage, unless you’re lucky enough to score a card for list price at an in-store restock. The RTX 3050 and RX 6500 XT will sell for much more than they’re worth, and in most circumstances, I wouldn’t recommend buying them at whatever price scalpers inevitably set.

I also understand the reality of a lot of PC gamers, myself included. A lot of folks have been patiently waiting to upgrade for over a year and a half, and something has got to give. The RTX 3050 and RX 6500 XT aren’t ideal options, but they’re better than cards that are multiple generations old and selling for $500 or more.

Hopefully, they’ll help with supply, too. The RX 6600 XT uses a smaller GPU to help with shortages, and you can already see that paying off. Although still expensive, a lot of RX 6600 and RX 6600 XT models sell for closer to their list price than the higher-end cards in the range. Hopefully we’ll see something similar with the RTX 3050 and RX 6500 XT.

CES 2022 was about making the most of a bad situation, and that’s true far beyond graphics cards. My hope is that Nvidia and AMD don’t forget these budget options when supply issues calm down and that we’ll continue to see GPUs around $200 for many generations to come.

Jacob Roach
Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
It’s official: AMD Ryzen AI 300 is up to 40% faster
AMD announcing its Ryzen AI CPUs at Computex 2024.

AMD's upcoming Ryzen AI APUs stole the show at Computex 2024, but we haven't seen them in action -- until now. Three Geekbench tests have just leaked, showcasing the performance of AMD's flagship APU, and it's safe to say that it did an excellent job. It's not just the highest number of TOPS in an NPU that AMD can now brag about -- it's also competitive, desktop-worthy CPU performance and a vastly improved GPU. Let's dig in.

The Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 appeared in two Geekbench tests and one OpenCL test, meaning that we get some insight into both CPU and GPU performance. Before we get into comparing test scores, it's worth noting that in these tests, the APU appears under the name of AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 170 with a Radeon 880M GPU. In reality, as Wccftech points out, AMD appears to have changed its naming scheme at the last minute, and the HX 170 is now the HX 370. The GPU in that model should also be the 890M, so there are some discrepancies.

Read more
I tripled my frame rate with one button — and you can too
Forza Horizon 5 running on an Asus gaming monitor.

Lossless Scaling, a $7 Steam utility that promises increased performance on PC, just received a massive update. The new 2.9 version adds a mode that can triple your frame rate in games, all with a single mouse click.

I've written about Lossless Scaling previously, but this update is a big one. The utility gives you upscaling and frame generation for any game, and on any GPU. It includes a variety of different upscaling utilities like AMD's FidelityFX Super Resolution 1 and Nvidia's Image Scaling, but frame generation is where the app truly shines. The app includes its own AI frame generation algorithm that inserts new frames between those already rendered.

Read more
It’s the end of an era for AMD
An AMD Ryzen CPU socketed in a motherboard.

AMD is following Intel's lead. The company is rebranding its Ryzen CPUs to closely align with what Intel is doing, shifting away from a long product string toward a three-digit part number that includes the phrase everyone is talking about: AI.

Starting with the new Strix Point CPUs, which sport the Zen 5 architecture, AMD is using "Ryzen AI" to differentiate its processors. In addition, instead of a string of four digits noting everything from the year released to the architecture the chip uses, AMD is using a three-digit part number, matching what Intel kicked off with its Meteor Lake CPUs.

Read more