In a move that will have significant repercussions for the video card industry in North America and Europe, EVGA today has announced that the company is parting ways from NVIDIA. As a result, the company will not be producing video cards based on NVIDIA’s next-generation of GPUs – and won’t be immediately switching allegiance to AMD or Intel, either. Consequently, NVIDIA is losing their largest add-in board (AIB) in North America, and the broader North American video card market is losing one of its biggest and best-known vendors.

In a brief announcement posted on EVGA’s forums, the company outlined their parting from NVIDIA, while underscoring that this affects the next-generation of video cards, and that EVGA will continue to provide current-gen products and support existing customers.

  • EVGA will not carry the next generation graphics cards.
  • EVGA will continue to support the existing current generation products.
  • EVGA will continue to provide the current generation products.

EVGA is committed to our customers and will continue to offer sales and support on the current lineup. Also, EVGA would like to say thank you to our great community for the many years of support and enthusiasm for EVGA graphics cards.

EVGA Management

Meanwhile, in a briefing attended by Jon Peddie Research and Gamers Nexus, EVGA’s CEO (and founder) Andrew Han laid out some further details about the transition. These are both great pieces and as I’m not going to simply rehash them point by point, I’d encourage readers looking for a first-hand recounting of the briefing to check them out.

As laid out in both pieces, EVGA’s parting from NVIDIA comes as the company’s relationship with NVIDIA has, according to EVGA, soured over the years. Most notably, AIB margins have been slowly shrinking over the past couple of decades, with JPR publishing that gross margins at the AIB partners have fallen from 25% in 2000 to 10% in 2015, and finally an estimated 5% this year. Meanwhile, as NVIDIA has slowly ramped up its own efforts to directly sell its Founders Edition (reference) video cards in Best Buy and other retailers, AIBs like EVGA have been put in a position of directly competing with their partner-turned-supplier.


Jon Peddie Research: AIB Gross Margins v. NVIDIA Gross Margins

This, in turn, has put EVGA in a position where they are taking a loss on selling high-end NVIDIA cards, a significant shift from what are normally the highest margin products sold by video card vendors. And while consumers are benefitting from this in the short term via cheaper video cards, taking a loss of hundreds of dollars per video card is not sustainable – nor is it a viable business practice to begin with.

As a result of these factors (and undoubtedly more tales known only between EVGA and NVIDIA) EVGA has opted to part ways from NVIDIA. This means that EVGA will not be selling video cards based on NVIDIA’s next generation of GPUs, and that EVGA is ramping down production of existing GeForce RTX 30 series cards. According to Gamers Nexus, EVGA expects to run out of current-generation cards for retail by the end of the year, with the company setting aside a remainder of those cards as spares to honor warranty obligations.


EVGA RTX 3090 Ti FTW3: A Money-Losing Product

Perhaps equally notable, EVGA has also made it clear that they are not immediately partnering with a competing GPU vendor, either. So for the moment, at least, this is not going to be a case of EVGA switching allegiances to AMD or Intel. Instead, EVGA is going to be out of the video card market for an indefinite period of time. To be sure, according to GN and JPR, the company has not completely closed the door on partnering with another GPU vendor, but they also aren’t actively pursing the matter right now.

And while this marks a massive cut to EVGA’s business – Gamers Nexus reports that video cards represent 80% of EVGA’s revenue – EVGA is not going out of business. The company still has a successful and well-regarded power supply business, as well as a more niche presence in high-end motherboards and gaming peripherals. This also means that EVGA will continue supporting its existing video card customers even once their remaining video card stockpile runs out, as the company still wants to maintain its sterling reputation for customer service.

Commentary: A Big Loss for Consumers, and a Opening the Door To Vertical Integration

EVGA’s exit from the video card industry represents what is easily the biggest shift in the retail video card landscape in over a decade. EVGA is not the first NVIDIA partner to part ways with the company – BFG and XFX were both major NVIDIA partners back in the 00s as well – but EVGA’s exit would seem to be the biggest yet. According to JPR, EVGA held 40% of the North American retail market, and they were a sizable player in Europe as well. EVGA was NVIDIA’s de facto premiere partner in the west, both in terms of total video card volumes and in terms of mindshare, with a legacy of producing high quality video cards backed with some of the best support in the industry.

As a result, EVGA’s exit is a big loss for consumers and video card enthusiasts overall. While NVIDIA can (and undoubtedly will) shift allocations over to their remaining AIB partners – Zotac is arguably the next best-known NVIDIA-exclusive vendor in North America – this still represents a reduction in competition in video card designs, especially with premium products where EVGA did some of their best work. And none of the remaining AIBs have a reputation for support that matches EVGA’s (though to be sure, reputation isn’t necessarily representative of the real world).


EVGA's Immediate Future: More Mobos and PSUs

But the full impact to the consumer market is going to hinge on what NVIDIA does next. From EVGA’s briefing it’s clear that there has been some friction between the two companies for quite some time, so while these revelations are new to outsiders, internally the businesses have been at odds for a while now. That means NVIDIA had plenty of time to prepare for EVGA’s split (they were first informed in April), and NVIDIA already has their own retail operations.

In fact, it’s those retail operations that seem to have led the way to what’s happening today. It wasn’t until the Pascal generation/GTX 10 series (2016) that NVIDIA began selling its own retail cards; for the 20 years before that, NVIDIA relied on AIBs to move its products. And even after that point, NVIDIA has purposely limited its reach by only selling cards directly, and later just through Best Buy.

Still, I’ve long wondered how AIBs have felt about NVIDIA going into competition with their own board partners, and now we have an answer, it would seem. EVGA is being driven out in part by NVIDIA’s direct presence on the market, with their Founders Edition cards undercutting EVGA’s products in price. It’s a relationship that by its very nature puts AIBs like EVGA at a disadvantage, as NVIDIA has the better brand recognition (all cards are NVIIDA cards) and much of NVIDIA’s R&D is paid for by their internal need for reference cards. This means that AIBs face additional costs on top of buying hardware from NVIDIA, especially if they want to go for premium designs like EVGA has been apt to do.

In short, NVIDIA’s decision to directly sell video cards, whether intentional or not, is putting the squeeze on AIBs. And NVIDIA-exclusive AIBs like EVGA are the most vulnerable.

EVGA’s exit from the video card market, in turn, opens the door to larger changes in video card manufacturing and distribution. Video card complexity has increased significantly over the years, and consequently so have the R&D costs at every single level. GPUs aren’t just getting more advanced, but they need ever finer PCB routing for memory, more advanced VRMs, bulked up cooling, and more. It’s not unlike the fab market, where every generation ups the ante on costs and discourages the kind of competition that results in lower prices, lower margins, and the inability to afford to play in the next generation of the game.

All of this, in turn, is making vertical integration look more and more appealing. While the AIBs in one form or another have played pivotal roles in the video card market since the dawn of the PC era, offering retail reach and support that the GPU vendors didn’t have or didn’t want to bother with, the actual value they add is, unfortunately, diminishing. Video cards are becoming so complex that, especially at the high end, the best move may very well be to stick with the reference designs. All of which further reduces the value (and uniqueness) AIBs can provide.


EVGA's Experiments Haven't Always Panned Out...

In short, this may be the moment where we see video card production pivot to having the GPU vendors themselves sell their cards, without the use of AIBs. So rather than having 10 video cards within a generation and then numerous AIB variations thereof – as is the case now with NVIDIA’s GeForce RTX 30 series – we’d have something more akin to desktop CPUs where there’s a dozen or so SKUs provided directly by the manufacturer.

Of course, this has been tried once before, with disastrous results (kids, go ask your parents about 3dfx), so it’s not by any means a sure-fire thing. But EVGA’s departure opens the door to NVIDIA to swoop in and take back 40% of their retail market for themselves, if that’s what they want.

And if NVIDIA doesn’t fill in the gap, then NVIDIA’s remaining AIBs will no doubt be happy to do it. The volume vacuum from EVGA’s exit means almost half the NVDIIA North American video card market is up for grabs. It is a huge opportunity to reshape that landscape and grab the kind of market share that would take years and years to peel away under more normal circumstances. So although a dark day for EVGA, opportunity knocks for the AIBs who remain.

The next-biggest question at this point is whether EVGA will remain in the video card market at all. From the Gamers Nexus and JPR articles it’s clear that EVGA is not keen on immediately jumping back in with a different partner. And, given that the Ethereum Merge just went through this week and video cards across the globe were liberated from their inane toiling (read: Ethereum is no longer relying on proof-of-work for blockchain processing), now is not the time to be making any firm plans.

The broad expectations of the industry are that all of these former mining cards are going to be boomeranging back on to the used video card market, similar to the last crypto hangover but in even larger volumes due to the much longer period this most recent mining boom went on. So the video card market is going to be dealing with an oversupply as it is, meaning that it’s not going to be a great time to be producing more video cards, as even next-gen cards below the flagship level will be competing with their predecessors.

So even if EVGA does ultimately opt to get back in to video cards – and I hope they do – sitting things out while the market corrects itself and digests the sudden surge of used cards is a prudent move. How long all of that will take remains to be seen, but as the current situation took years to get into, it won’t be a fast fix coming back out. In time, it would be a feather in either AMD or Intel’s cap to line up EVGA as a partner, as they bring a level of sophistication and respect that none of their current AIBs possess. Though it should be noted that the overall GPU market share is so significantly tilted in NVIDIA’s favor right now – a 4:1 ratio – that at former production levels EVGA could probably absorb most of the AMD retail market presence, something AMD’s other AIBs would no doubt be unhappy with.

Unfortunately, this exit also underscores how exposed EVGA is in the video card market, since video card sales were 80% of its revenue. The company has other product lines, but these are smaller in volume and all in product categories that are even more commoditized than video cards.


Over the Years EVGA Has Gone Big Into PSUs, In More Ways Than One

EVGA, for its part, has certainly made efforts to diversify over the years, but with limited success. Almost a decade ago I was fortunate enough to be at a business dinner with EVGA and Anand, where Andrew Han asked for our feedback on what sorts of products we thought would be good markets for EVGA to expand into. We ended up making several suggestions, but as today’s EVGA product mix shows, EVGA never found a second market on the same order of magnitude as video cards. Consequently, I’m not surprised to see Gamers Nexus report that EVGA is not planning on expanding into new product categories in the near future; that’s not something they’ve had luck with in better times, never mind going into this likely recession.

Ultimately, while today’s news marks a seismic shift in the video card landscape, it’s also the kind of news where there’s no way to put a positive spin on it. The video card market, for its part, will keep moving right along without EVGA, but the market and consumers are all the worse for EVGA’s departure. Thankfully, this is not EVGA’s eulogy – the company is still staying in business – but I sincerely hope that when we talk about EVGA in the future, it will be for more than just motherboards and PSUs. Video cards are were EVGA has made its name, and it’s still where EVGA does some of its best work.

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  • Threska - Saturday, September 17, 2022 - link

    "The company has other product lines, but these are smaller in volume and all in product categories that are even more commoditized than video cards."

    Upcoming motherboards in an ITX format.
  • rickon66 - Saturday, September 17, 2022 - link

    "Oh Please Don't Take My EVGA Away"
  • WaltC - Saturday, September 17, 2022 - link

    I think EVGA hurt themselves early on by only going with one GPU make. They had nowhere to go if the going with nVidia got rough, and that appears to be just what has happened. If 80% of their income was derived from the sale of nVidia GPUs then EVGA must have lost its shirt selling them recently, as that's the only reason they would jump away from nVidia without making arrangements to pick up the slack with something else. Everybody had a tough time during the shortages for a year, but I don't see that being nVidia's fault. It's a falling out with nVidia, though, certainly. Next month, EVGA could announce that it's going with AMD...I think they need to do something!
  • alufan - Sunday, September 18, 2022 - link

    First things First I have a 6900xt and a 3090 in 2 Machines, never had an EVGA card but have seen they are decent products with good backup.
    I will not be buying another Nvidia card not because of this, however this action by EVGA only adds to the other issues coming from Nvidia recently, anyone who has studied the recent Financial Day briefing by Jenson will know exactly what I mean when he openly admits to market manipulation and he laments the loss of the last couple of years crazy GPU prices due to mining, the way they seem to treat their partners also speaks volumes of his moral standards and his disregard for others who have helped to grow his company.
    I predict Nvidia will push other AIBs out of the market and increase its own FE unit sales or make the TI versions exclusive after all why sell a chip for a few hundred when you can sell the whole card for a thousand plus.
    EVGA needs to partner with AMD and do some ass kicking of its own against Nvidia the EVGA name is a strong case for quality and i do believe haveing access to both current flagships the AMD card will come out on top this time, all Nvidia has at the moment is RTX and the next gen AMD is said to be very strong in ray tracing.
  • Khanan - Sunday, September 18, 2022 - link

    Oh I hope you’re right, would be nice to see Nvidias ass kicked for a change, just like Intels before.
  • Nfarce - Tuesday, October 4, 2022 - link

    " all Nvidia has at the moment is RTX and the next gen AMD is said to be very strong in ray tracing."

    Yeeeahhh....Nvidia only makes GPUs so that's where their R&D goes fully. They do not make processors which also requires R&D funding as AMD does (for not only PCs, but for game consoles). But I always love those comments of "AMD's latest GPU is going to be an Nvidia killer!" Where has that ever happened. Fury X, is that you I hear from the grave? LOL....
  • Khanan - Sunday, September 18, 2022 - link

    Jensen himself recently said something along the lines that he considers AIBs as useless vultures, that’s also how he treats them, despite the good work they did for Nvidia. Hopefully Nvidia loses market share, this kind of behavior should be punished. And glad the ARM deal did not went through, one of the best news of 2021/2022.
  • IBM760XL - Sunday, September 18, 2022 - link

    I had wondered if nVIDIA was going to 3dfx themselves with regards to AIB partners when they started the Founders Edition program, it took a few years but it seems the answer is at least in part yes.

    I agree that you can't blame EVGA for leaving with that trend in margins. It would be fascinating to learn if the situation is similar for other partners. I'd have to imagine it's broadly similar for other nVIDIA-exclusive partners. Probably somewhat similar for AMD partners, though perhaps not to the same degree. We'll probably never know unless other ones leave the market.

    On EVGA peripherals, I just bought an EVGA mouse. So far I'm happy with it. But I've only had it about a week...
  • RestChem - Sunday, September 18, 2022 - link

    Remember when sites like this one would round up as many of the various AIBs' versions of a particular GPU as they could get and bench them all against one another? Really stress-test them and report faults even prior to replacement? I bet the AIBs hated that, but I also bet it pushed them to work harder and turn out better, stabler, faster, cooler designs. In turn, I bet NV wasn't crazy either about their reference boards maybe getting trashed by people working harder. But the end-users benefitted. Feels like we're kind of an afterthought anymore, but there's a piece missing in this whole mess, maybe it's us.
  • JACK4888 - Sunday, September 18, 2022 - link

    And then there were 3, Intel, AMD, and NVIDIA. Before you know it EVGA will be bought by a giant and mobo production will become 3 "competitors".

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