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

888 Holdings close to realizing William Hill purchase

Prominent online casino and sportsbook operator 888 Holdings has announced that it remains on track to complete its purchase of the non-American assets of rival sportsbetting titan William Hill by the end of March.

The Gibraltar-headquartered firm used an official press release (pdf) to declare that it has received ‘all mandatory anti-trust and gaming regulatory clearances’ concerning the envisioned acquisition and expects the deal to be realized during the first quarter of 2022 ‘subject to the satisfaction of remaining conditions.’

Leading light:

Alongside this news, London-listed 888 Holdings stated that ‘integration planning’ on just how it will incorporate the operations of its latest buy into its own business is ‘progressing well.’ The comp…

Donald Trump Secures the Republican Jewish Coalition’s Backing

Donald Trump has secured the backing of the Republican Jewish Coalition (RJC) ahead of the upcoming elections. As announced, the non-profit has pledged to contribute $5 million to Trump’s reelection.

The RJC’s ambition is to forge a meaningful relationship between the Jewish community and Republican lawmakers. The organization’s overarching aim is to foster favorable relations between the United States and Israel.

RJC officials also intend to distribute an additional $15 million among other GOP candidates.

The contributions come amid the continued conflict between Israel and Hamas and decreased support from Biden’s government. In an interview with Fox News, Sam Markstein, RJC’s political dire…

Xbox Celebrates Its Bethesda Acquisition With Step Brothers Homage

April 10 was National Siblings Day, and to celebrate the official day of brotherly and sisterly love, Xbox posted a photo of its newest family member Bethesda that was inspired by 2008’s cult comedy classic Step Brothers.

Funhouse Trailer Is Big Brother Meets Gory Saw Horror

The new trailer for the upcoming horror movie Funhouse has been released. The movie mixes Saw-style gore and reality TV satire, and it releases in May.

The trailer sets up the basic premise. A group of hot young social media and online stars are gathered together in a house to participate in a Big brother-style reality show, with every second of the day streamed to the world. But this is a deadly reality show, and the unlucky contestants must deal with masked killers and gruesome traps as they attempt to stay alive to win the game. Funhouse doesn’t exactly look like the most subtle of satires, but it’ll hopefully deliver some gruesome kills along the way. Check the trailer out below:

NSW Minister Slams ClubsNSW for Thwarting Poker Machine Reforms

ABC reported that Victor Dominello, a senior Liberal minister from New South Wales, has spoken out about the power and impact of ClubsNSW, an influential gambling lobby group that he claims forced him out of his portfolio.

Dominello Slams ClubsNSW as the ‘Gun Lobby’ of Australia’s Gambling Industry

In an interview for ABC’s Four Corners, Dominello accused the group of being like “the equivalent of the gun lobby in the United States“. The not-for-profit lobby group represents over 1,000 registered clubs across the state, which collectively own and operate more than 64,000 poker machines.

ClubsNSW has defe…

Dynamite suggestion for unfinished Imperial Palace Saipan

A senior legislator in the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands has reportedly suggested blowing up the half-completed building that had been due to host the hotel for the jurisdiction’s giant Imperial Palace Saipan development.

According to a report from the Marianas Variety newspaper, the extreme proposition came from Northern Mariana Islands House of Representatives member Vicente Camacho (pictured) during a special Thursday committee hearing to discuss the possible future of the unfinished structure. The source detailed that no work has been carried out on the $650 million Saipan project since January after owner Imperial Pacific International Holdings Limited was issued with a stop order owing to its inability to honor a multitude of financ…