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'My favourite hobby is cooked': Tech firms blame AI for soaring device prices

Apple, Microsoft, Nintendo and Valve raise device prices, blaming AI-driven component shortages

Tech

'My favourite hobby is cooked': Tech firms blame AI for soaring device prices

For years, buyers of tech could rely on a familiar trend – that older devices would get cheaper over time. That now seems to have stopped, or in some cases, completely reversed.

Apple and Microsoft’s Xbox have joined a growing list of firms hiking prices for devices and games consoles that are years old. Apple raised the prices of its tablets and laptops by nearly 20% on Thursday. The news was swiftly followed by Microsoft saying it would yet again raise the price of its five-year-old Xbox Series S and X consoles by at least $100 (£75.70). The pricing changes, which will take effect from August, are its third in just over a year – and see the cost of a new console be 30% to 40% more expensive than it was this time last year.

Apple, Microsoft, Nintendo and Valve raise device prices, blaming AI-driven component shortages

“Xbox with another hardware price increase? I gotta laugh to keep from crying,” wrote one X user reacting to the news. “My favourite hobby is cooked.” On Reddit, another user responding to the news said Xbox “may as well just cancel” its upcoming console Helix “because no one will be able to afford it”.

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These companies have pointed to the rising cost of crucial components needed to build their machines, laying the blame on AI. Compute-hungry data centres, which power AI, need more and more chips to keep up with demand from AI companies, meaning demand for them is far outstripping supply. Some have called it “Ramageddon” – as random access memory (RAM), a once-cheap part of any computer, has now shot up in price.

Nintendo has also said it would raise the Switch 2’s price globally from September. Valve recently launched its new Steam Machine gaming PC with a higher price than expected, starting its announcement with a long explanation about spiking component costs. It had already raised the cost of its handheld Steam Deck by 40% for similar reasons in May.

Yang Wang, principal analyst at Counterpoint Research, called the memory crisis “the most disruptive supply-side event the smartphone industry has ever faced”. The iPhone has so far been shielded from price hikes, and Wang said premium phone makers such as Apple and Samsung were “better positioned to weather the disruption”.

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Investors may not have been too overjoyed, either. Apple’s share price took a tumble following the announcement of its price bumps on Thursday. Apple’s announcement, which cited an “unprecedented challenge” with memory chips facing the industry, has been seen by several analysts as indicating that the cost of massive AI investment could hit device sales across the board.

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