Intel’s expected 10% CPU price hike would’ve been annoying in any year. But in 2026, it just feels like one more shove in a hobby that is already exhausting to keep up with. What makes this sting more is that it is not really about Intel alone. It is about how every time PC gamers think they have found a good moment to upgrade, there’s either a shortage, a new wave of scalpers, or some fresh pricing disaster around the corner to ruin it all.
What’s holding back every PC gamer?
The expected Intel hike lands on top of everything else already going wrong. CPUs getting pricier on their own would have been manageable, but what makes it feel miserable is that gamers are no longer dealing with just one bad component cycle. This is why every new report feels less like news and more like confirmation that the hobby is getting harder to justify.
AI is a big reason why the market is even worse. I was eyeing a nice CPU upgrade for my rig, but that would have forced a RAM upgrade too, which means stepping into the DDR5 mess at exactly the wrong time. And everybody already knows how ugly that situation has become.
Infrastructure demand for AI is booming, and suppliers are naturally prioritizing higher-margin server products over consumer hardware. For memory makers, that is just better business. But it also means gaming PCs, laptops, smartphones, and other everyday devices are getting squeezed in the process. That creates a nasty domino effect: RAM and storage get more expensive, manufacturers start pushing prices up across the board, and suddenly even a mid-range PC upgrade starts looking financially stupid.

And then come the shortages, scalpers, and timing traps
Even when prices are not outright exploding, PC gaming still gets battered by the same miserable cycle of shortages, low stock, awkward launch windows, and god-awful scalping.
Sometimes it is GPUs. Sometimes it is CPUs. Sometimes it is memory.
The hobby feels exhausting rather than merely expensive. You are not saving up for better hardware. You are trying to time a market that keeps finding new ways to get worse.

Is PC gaming even the smart choice anymore?
That is a question I never thought I would seriously entertain. I am not saying PC gaming is suddenly bad, and I do not see myself leaving the platform anytime soon. It can still be the best place to play. But the old idea that it was also the smart value play is getting harder and harder to defend. And that is before we even get into the state of PC game launches, where poor optimisation has become its own kind of insult.
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