ASUS has effectively pulled the plug on two high-end graphics cards due to the ongoing memory crunch. The RTX 5070 Ti, which features 16GB of GDDR6 VRAM, is no longer in production for NVIDIA, according to a report by Hardware Unboxed. ASUS explicitly informed the channel that the card is facing a supply shortage and has therefore placed it into "end of life" status.
This means that the card will no longer be manufactured or supported by ASUS, effectively making it unavailable to purchase from any retailers or distributors in Australia at least for the first quarter of this year. The 5060 Ti 16GB model is also on the chopping block, with ASUS stating it has no plans to produce either card moving forward.
The decision comes as no surprise given the current economic climate and the increased demand for high-bandwidth memory from data center infrastructure companies. This shift has resulted in higher prices for consumer RAM kits, GPUs, and SSDs.
NVIDIA has historically provided its add-in board partners with both the GPU die and memory needed to make graphics cards, but it appears that this may be changing. A recent rumor suggested that NVIDIA told its partners they would need to start sourcing memory on their own, which could be a significant blow to PC enthusiasts who rely on these high-end GPUs for demanding games.
The 5070 Ti and 5060 Ti 16GB were popular among gamers due to their ability to handle more than 8GB of VRAM, making them ideal for modern AAA titles. However, it seems that these cards may be gone for good, leaving gamers with limited options if they're looking to upgrade or build a new system.
This means that the card will no longer be manufactured or supported by ASUS, effectively making it unavailable to purchase from any retailers or distributors in Australia at least for the first quarter of this year. The 5060 Ti 16GB model is also on the chopping block, with ASUS stating it has no plans to produce either card moving forward.
The decision comes as no surprise given the current economic climate and the increased demand for high-bandwidth memory from data center infrastructure companies. This shift has resulted in higher prices for consumer RAM kits, GPUs, and SSDs.
NVIDIA has historically provided its add-in board partners with both the GPU die and memory needed to make graphics cards, but it appears that this may be changing. A recent rumor suggested that NVIDIA told its partners they would need to start sourcing memory on their own, which could be a significant blow to PC enthusiasts who rely on these high-end GPUs for demanding games.
The 5070 Ti and 5060 Ti 16GB were popular among gamers due to their ability to handle more than 8GB of VRAM, making them ideal for modern AAA titles. However, it seems that these cards may be gone for good, leaving gamers with limited options if they're looking to upgrade or build a new system.