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Memory Price Surge Squeezes Game Console Margins; 2026 Shipment Forecast Revised Downward
December 2, 2025 | TrendForceEstimated reading time: 2 minutes
TrendForce’s latest report states that rising memory prices have significantly increased BOM costs in consumer electronics, leading brands to hike retail prices and dampening market demand. After reducing its 2026 shipment forecasts for smartphones and laptops earlier in November, TrendForce has also downgraded its 2026 forecast for game console shipments—from an initial YoY decline of 3.5% to 4.4%.
TrendForce notes that the swift rise in memory prices is affecting a range of consumer devices, including game consoles. Historically, game console manufacturers earned the majority of their profits from software and subscription services. As such, they depended significantly on incremental retail price reductions and occasional promotions to expand their user base.
However, this strategy is being disrupted. For instance, the Switch 2's launch price of $450 is higher than its predecessor’s, due to a doubled memory capacity and increased component costs. Memory modules are projected to account for 21–23% of total hardware costs in 2026. This severely reduces profit margins and limits Nintendo's flexibility for future discounts.
Sony and Microsoft anticipate that memory costs will make up over 35% of the total BOM costs by 2026. This trend complicates the traditional mid-cycle price-cut approach, especially years after launch. Some regions might see console prices increase to compensate for rising expenses.
Microsoft, for example, is rumored to be considering another price increase for the Xbox, despite recently adjusting prices in September. Given these circumstances, console manufacturers might need to move away from the industry’s historic “price-for-volume” strategy, adopting more defensive pricing tactics to maintain profitability.
The inability to lower retail prices—or even the need to keep them elevated—will likely weaken promotional efforts in 2026. With the PS5 and Xbox Series now mature, the absence of price incentives could notably reduce consumer demand. While the new Switch 2 benefited from early-cycle momentum, Nintendo has admitted that achieving economies of scale is essential for controlling manufacturing costs, and external market changes could still impact profitability.
Considering the dynamics of all three major console makers, TrendForce now forecasts that the shipments within the global game console market will decline 4.4% YoY in 2026.
TrendForce also highlights how supply and demand fluctuations in key components have previously disrupted console shipments. In 2021, Sony reduced PS5 production from 16 million to 15 million units because of semiconductor shortages. Similarly, Nintendo, affected by the global supply crunch, lowered its Switch sales forecast from 21 million to 19 million in November 2022, and then to 18 million after weaker holiday sales, finishing the fiscal year at 17.97 million units.
Overall, the increase in memory costs is prompting console makers to rethink their usual growth strategies, which could further slow down shipment growth. If supply and demand for memory do not improve next year, global console adoption might stagnate.
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Industry-Wide Memory Constraints Grow as AI-Driven Supply Shift Reshapes Market
04/13/2026 | Global Electronics AssociationArtificial Intelligence is consuming a growing share of the world’s memory supply, leaving electronics manufacturers across industries facing longer lead times, rising prices, and increasing uncertainty, according to a new report released today from the Global Electronics Association.
Gartner Forecasts Worldwide Semiconductor Revenue to Exceed $1.3 Trillion in 2026
04/10/2026 | Gartner, Inc.Global semiconductor revenue is projected to exceed $1.3 trillion in 2026, exhibiting the highest growth in the last two decades, according to Gartner, Inc., a business and technology insights company.
Nanya Technology Secures $2.5 Billion to Expand Advanced Memory Production Amid AI-Driven Shortage
04/02/2026 | I-Connect007 Editorial TeamTaiwanese memory chipmaker Nanya Technology saw its shares jump to the daily limit of 10% following the announcement of a $2.5 billion private placement from investors SanDisk, HK Hynix, Cisco Systems and Kioxia, aimed at boosting its advanced chip manufacturing capacity.
SEMI Sees Double-Digit Growth in 300mm Fab Spending Through 2027
04/02/2026 | SEMIWorldwide 300mm fab equipment spending is expected to increase 18% to $133 billion in 2026 and 14% to $151 billion in 2027, SEMI reported in its latest 300mm Fab Outlook.
Beyond Design: ReRAM–The Industry's Next Game-Changer
03/26/2026 | Barry Olney -- Column: Beyond DesignResistive RAM (ReRAM) is a nextgeneration nonvolatile memory technology that stores data by changing the resistance of a dielectric material layer rather than trapping electrical charge. That simple shift unlocks a surprising amount of power. ReRAM sits at the intersection of speed, efficiency, and scalability, exactly where the industry is hitting bottlenecks.