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Original post by Antheus Quote:Loyalty is crucial precisely because there is no difference. At the end of the day, individual titles will have unique performance which is mostly unrelated to card itself, but a combination of many factors.
Original post by ChaosEngine
I have to say, I don't get the concept of being "loyal" to something like a graphics card. Unless you are specifically targeting the capabilities of one line (seems like a foolish thing to do), the choice of ATI or NVIDIA is purely dependant on performance/reliability.
And while statistically one card will outperform the other, individual user only cares about one single title.
Brand is a big deal.
The other side is price ranges. Brand loyalty may push sales in individual ranges higher while acquiring new customers in low and budget price ranges. Acquiring loyalty of those means they'll upgrade.
There is brand identity. When Title X comes up with nVidia logo, it offers some comfort/recognition/... to those loyal to brand.
Finally, there is brand goodwill. Nobody has ever spoken against Google. Everyone hates Microsoft. If your brand gets on good side, you get positive bias. Not only from media (which can be bought), but also increasingly important viral branding - bloggers, enthusiasts, the geek in a group of friends people call when buying new machines.
Brand is all that still matters. Technology, reliability, performance, ... None of majority markets can evaluate those objectively.
Here is an example of brand strength: "Macs do not crash and they never did". When did you last encounter people bitching over Macs crashing. "Oh, the bomb? It's cute" What do numbers say, statistically, which crashes more often - Windows or Mac?
Mac vs. Windows is a totally different issue. My day to day computing experience (and by extension my life since I spend such a large % of it on a computer) will be different depending on OS. "Loyalty" here makes sense. I have an investment in one or the other and there is a significant cost (both monetary and time) to switching. With a graphics card, I can pop in a new card and all that should change is I get a better framerate (regardless of manufacturer).
I was speaking from the end users POV. Obviously the companies want to have brand loyalty, but that's just marketing blurb. My point is that we (as consumers, but especially as developers) should be objective about such things.