New GPUs are selling out far too quickly– a trend that now includes Nvidia's latest RTX 50-series – prompting AMD’s consumer and gaming rep Frank Azor to ask on X, "What features are you most excited about in RDNA4?" to which one sentiment quickly emerged: "availability would be a brilliant start."
Pricing concerns were equally vocal, with one user remarking, "Don’t want to pay more for my GPU than I paid for my entire high end gaming rig a year ago," while another noted, "FSR 4 is a big one," signalling the community’s growing appetite for advanced AI upscaling that can finally match Nvidia’s long-established DLSS technology.
The conversation took an interesting turn as some commenters called for "real frames, not fake frames," reflecting scepticism over Nvidia's latest Multi Frame Generation (MFG) feature—an innovation that has sparked as much controversy as it has admiration.
Critics have taken aim at Nvidia's marketing claims regarding its RTX 5070, which purports to rival the older RTX 4090 on the strength of MFG, a claim many dismiss as dubious.
Other technical aspects such as performance per watt, VRAM, AI capabilities, and driver quality have also been mentioned, yet the overwhelming focus remains on ensuring that GPUs are not only powerful but also readily available and affordable.
With AMD gearing up for its Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 XT releases in early March, many hope that a model delivering near RTX 4080/5080-level raster performance for around $500, alongside solid ray-tracing and FSR 4 upscaling performance, will finally hit the market without the usual hype-induced setbacks.