Finally, it seems that NVIDIA will not launch new graphics cards to the gaming market, for now, it would focus on increasing the production of current models, waiting for AMD to make them a bit of competition.
This month they have begun to jump various information regarding new NVIDIA graphics cards for the month of April, at the latest and that would be presented next month, during the Game Developer Conference or during the GPU Technology Conference. Supposedly, these graphics cards would be from the Ampere family, a new family of which nothing was known and that would be the gaming version of Volta, which have Tensor Cores, developed for AI. Well, all this would have been officially denied by NVIDIA, according to the specialized media PCGAMESN.
PCGAMESN explains that has contacted directly with NVIDIA and the company has informed them that they will not launch or present any new graphics card during the month of March, in the planned events, as had been said. This demolishes the hopes of many gaming fans, who saw a light in the face of the great shortage of graphics cards. This would also explain why the CEO of NVIDIA has insisted several times this year that they would increase the production of current graphics cards.
The positive part, in a way, would be an update to the company's Roadmap during the GPU Technology Conference, where the company plans to talk intensively about Artificial Intelligence, autonomous driving, and Deep Learning. Thus, the gaming market is left out, which will have to wait longer to see the new NVIDIA monsters with the new GDDR6 memories and some possible graphics cards only for the gaming market.
It should be noted that NVIDIA does not have the slightest need to launch new graphics cards to the market, since its current solutions are very powerful and efficient and AMD has been unable at all times to make real competition to NVIDIA, either in the gaming market or in the cryptocurrency market. AMD has many shortcomings with Vega, you just need to see the absurd consumption of these graphics cards or the time it took to launch custom models by manufacturers, with an OC, quite pathetic.