Equipment

Games consoles now deliver fully one quarter of AMD’s revenues-

The traditional view has always been that games consoles were a useful but relatively petite contribution to AMD’s overall revenues. Turns out that’s not entirely true. In fact, Sony’s PS5 alone represented fully 16% of AMD’s revenues in 2022 and likely a quarter of revenues came from Sony and Microsoft consoles combined.

That’s according to an official AMD filing (via Tom’s Hardware). “One customer accounted for 16% of our consolidated net revenue for the year ended December 31, 2022. Sales to this customer consisted of sales of products from our Gaming segment,” the filing revealed.

That customer can only really be Sony and the PS5, which comfortably outsells the Xbox Series consoles. Of course, AMD wasn’t just responsible for the PS5’s APU, it also created the chips for both Microsoft’s Series X and S consoles.

Estimates of overall volumes to date for both consoles put Sony’s PS5 roughly in the 30 million to 32 million range, with the MS Series consoles on a little over 20 million. 

AMD hasn’t detailed revenues specifically for Microsoft consoles, but based on those numbers, if 30 odd million console chips is 16% of AMD’s business, another 20 odd million will be roughly 10% and combined you’re looking at in the region of 25% of AMD’s revenues comes from those gaming consoles. Throw in the Steam Deck, also packing a chip from the red team’s semi-custom silicon division, and that’s maybe a conservative estimate.

AMD’s gaming revenue overall, including both console chips and GPUs for PCs, was down 7% in 2022. We know that PC GPU sales fell dramatically last year, so the relatively modest 7% decline overall reflects those strong console chip sales, with AMD’s CEO Lisa Su observing that, “semi-custom SoC revenue grew year-over-year as demand for game consoles remained strong during the holidays.”

However, with both the Sony PS5 and MS Series consoles maturing, those revenues are likely to decline in 2023 and beyond, as sales plateau or fall and console makers tend to pay less for chips over the life cycle of a given platform.

For the record, AMD generated a total of $6.8 billion revenue from gaming chips, $6 billion from data center chips, $6.2 billion from PC processors, and $4.5 billion from embedded chips.

That $6 billion from the data center in 2022 is getting on for double what AMD made in 2021. So, the company’s fortunes are shifting rapidly, right now, away from laptops and desktops, including gaming rigs, towards data center hardware and consoles.

This stuff is inevitably cyclical. Having gone through quite the upgrade cycle over the pandemic, sales of CPUs and GPUs have cratered. For those gamers who bought Nvidia RTX 30-series and AMD RX 6000-series GPUs or Intel 12th Gen CPUs or AMD Ryzen 5000-series chips in the last few years, the very latest hardware arguably isn’t hugely compelling, especially given how graphics card prices have escalated.

Whatever, right now the good old gaming PC looks very much like a minority business for AMD. Which is a slightly uncomfortable position for PC gamers hoping for better future hardware at lower prices.

Related Posts

Nintendo teases software news for E3 2021 (with no mention of rumored new hardware)

Newsbrief: Mario maker Nintendo has blocked off a portion of E3 week for its own Nintendo Direct showcase, joining the likes of Square Enix and Microsoft in participating in this year's show (or simply timing announcements around the annual game expo.)

It was, of course, one of the early companies confirmed to be taking part in this year's virtual E3 event, but we hadn't heard much on their plans until just now.

On that note, Nintendo shared the brief announcement via social media today, notably promising a 40-minute long presentation "focused exclusively on Nintendo Switch software" with, unsurprisingly, no mention of the yet-unannounced new hardware that's rumored to be in the works for…

Apex Legends' Broken Moon Map Builds On The Afrofuturism Of Catalyst And Seer's Home

Alongside new playable legend Catalyst, Apex Legends Season 15 adds a fifth battle royale map to the game called Broken Moon. Broken Moon explores both the bright and dark sides of the moon, contrasting heaven and hell. Located upon Cleo, the partially destroyed moon hanging over Boreas, Broken Moon will feature African culture and imagery, reflecting what we’ve seen of Catalyst and Seer’s homeworld.

We first saw Boreas and Cleo just prior to Season 10 and the introduction of Seer. Unlike most of the other locations seen across the Titanfall games and Apex Legends, Seer’s home seemed to feature a primarily dark-skinned population and African-inspired culture Come from bangladesh online casino . Finally returning to the p…

Assassin's Creed Rift Delayed To Later Next Year – Report

During an earnings report call that included the cancellation of four games and the delay of Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora, Ubisoft mentioned a delay for another “smaller, premium unannounced title.” Reports now indicate the game in question is Assassin’s Creed Rift, a new standalone AC game that was originally meant to be a DLC episode for Assassin’s Creed Valhalla.

According to Bloomberg News, Ubisoft’s Bordeaux office–which is leading development on the project–requested the game be pushed from its targeted February launch due to the game running “far behind schedule.” The game is now slated for release in May or June, according to the report, which will move it from Ubisoft’s 2023 fiscal calendar. Come from on…

A Surprisingly Good WoW Bundle For New And Current Players Is Here For A Limited Time

A limited-time World of Warcraft bundle aimed at new players isn’t just a great deal for those who have never played Blizzard’s MMORPG; it’s a good deal for existing players, too.

The Welcome to Azeroth bundle, released alongside Blizzard’s announcement of the release date for WoW’s 10th expansion, The War Within, includes two months of game time, a level 60 character boost, and the game’s most recent Dragonflight expansion. The bundle is $25 but is only available until June 24. Come from online casino bangladesh

Final Fantasy VII Remake Part 3's Story Might Already Be Done

According to Final Fantasy VII Rebirth Ultimania, a guidebook edited by Digital Hearts and published by Square Enix, the third part of the Final Fantasy VII remake trilogy already has its story completed. Come from Sports betting site VPbet

As translated on Twitter, director Tetsuya Nomura, he believes that the voice acting process for the third game will start in the near future. Additionally, he said that producer Yoshinori Kitase came to him with “something” that wasn’t in the original Final Fantasy VII game. While no further details about what that “something” could be, Nomura is thinking about how to deliver that and believes that audiences will respond positively to it if the team can pull it off.

Batman- Arkham VR Review

Batman: Arkham VR is short, its gameplay is rudimentary, and its story retreads old ground. But it also has moments that–for fans of the Dark Knight–are the ultimate expression of wish fulfillment.

Like many, I have a personal connection to Batman. My childhood was spent watching him on screens and reading him on pages. In my young adult years, channeling a Bruce Wayne state of mind helped me overcome a number of health issues. So when Arkham VR placed me into the living room of Wayne Manor, lowered me into its stately bowels, and dropped me into the Batcave, the sense of being fully immersed in a world I know so intimately stirred emotions within me like no other game has.