AMD closes in on Intel in latest Steam Hardware Survey — RAM capacity continues to rise despite the ongoing memory crunch
Gamers bought memory en masse to beat the memory crunch, while AMD is close to finally overtaking Intel in the gaming space.
Valve has released the Steam Hardware Survey for December 2025, with the results showing AMD slowly creeping towards Intel’s supremacy in the gaming space. Team Red broke the 40% threshold in the third quarter of 2025, and in just a matter of four months, it gained an additional 7% over Intel (55.47% in the last survey of 2025) with the biggest jump happening in December, where AMD jumped by 4.66% to 47.27%. This happened despite the current memory shortage, with pricing for memory modules like DDR5 reached record highs.
AMD dropped support for DDR4 RAM with the introduction of the AM5 platform, so Ryzen 7000 and 9000 chips can only work with DDR5 memory. On the other hand, Intel’s Raptor Lake Refresh, which outperforms the newer Arrow Lake chips in gaming, support both DDR4 and DDR5. Nevertheless, it seems that gamers still prefer the older Zen 3 CPUs from AMD to deal with the memory shortage, with the Ryzen 5 5800X and 5800XT among the top selling processors on Amazon over the holiday period. Even AMD’s legacy 5800X3D, which you can no longer find new, is booming in the used market, with some examples already selling for more than a brand-new 9800X3D.
This goes to show how Team Red has upended the gaming market, especially as many gamers are enamored by the massive 3D V-cache found in X3D chips. Some of them also remember the horrors of Intel’s instability issue from 2024, which likely contributed to Team Blue’s fall from its 77% Steam Hardware share from just five years ago.
System RAM continues to grow despite challenges
Another surprise in the latest Steam survey is the amount of user-installed system memory continues to increase despite the on-going shortage. RAM prices have surged by more than 100% in recent months as AI’s insatiable demand for memory is biting into the consumer space. This has led to Micron shuttering Crucial, its consumer and enthusiast brand, to focus on HBM and enterprise customers.
The number of user's with 32GB or more RAM jumps in the latest survey. The new "standard" 32GB gained a massive 2.11%, with 39.07% of Steam gamers surveyed rocking it. This nearly puts it on par with 16GB, which has 40.14% of all users. It’s likely that this change was fuelled by the increasing trend in RAM pricing, which probably pushed gamers who were still holding back to finally bite the bullet and buy that RAM upgrade before prices got even worse.
It will be interesting to see how Steam gamers react to the memory crisis over the coming months. While the Steam Hardware Survey is by not a scientific one by any means, it’s still a good indication of what direction the gaming market is taking, especially in these uncertain times.
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Jowi Morales is a tech enthusiast with years of experience working in the industry. He’s been writing with several tech publications since 2021, where he’s been interested in tech hardware and consumer electronics.
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Gururu Given the impact of memory prices in Q4 I am really curious about the difference between DDR5 vs DDR4 systems. Can anyone speculate based on the results what that could possibly be?Reply