Quote from: Worgarthe on Today at 15:23:05because cheap dGPUs for desktops will still outperform anything that an iGPU can offer. For less money.
First of all, most people are fine with a game, as long as it looks "OK". You don't even need a midrange card like RTX 4060 or 7600 to have a AAA game look "OK". There are countless comparisons showing that there is almost zero graphical difference between low and high settings in a game, especially games from the year 2020 upwards.
Next thing is, that the majority of people still use 1080p monitors. An iGPU like that from Panther Lake can easily deliver good graphics on that, even on new AAA titles.
Next thing is: when you can get CPU+iGPU in a single package, especially with a tile-based design - logic says that this package should be cheaper than producing a separate CPU and a separate GPU (the GPU even requiring its own board, RAM, cooler, etc.). It should be that way because of requiring much less resources.
Such an "APU product" would require less resources, cheaper to produce, tile-based-design allows either iGPU or CPU focus, easily upgradable on the same socket, thus more sustainable, and a very small environmental footprint once disposed. As a result it actually should be cheaper than separate solutions for CPU/GPU. The fact it's still not cheaper in price but even more expensive, only shows you that there is something wrong with the companies, and that the world ticks the wrong way.