Maverick009
Senior Member
It's not off topic at all. When following the previous posts the topic is directly related to the cost of high end routers like the GT-AXE16000 and whether there is a market for technologically loaded features like higher speed SoCs and 10GbE ports. I had made a previous post of some router specs I would like to see that go above and beyond this latest Asus router.
My reply you refer to was in response to RMerlin's original comments that expensive routers for example using many 10GbE and 5GbE or 2.5GbE ports don't have a much of market place for consumers right now. It wasn't the $12K price of a PC that was my main point. It was an example that there is a huge market for gamers and enthusiasts willing to pay for high priced equipment that is driving the entire computer and networking development. They pay a premium for cutting edge graphics cards, high end processors, networking equipment like routers and full systems. The business market is a large market but that isn't part of this consumer based market that we as Asus router owners are directly impacted by.
There is also the growing professional home user market where workers don't have access to the same equipment they had at work so they are upgrading their home computer and networking infrastructure. These users also are willing to pay a premium for higher end consumer equipment such as Asus routers including those marketed as high end gaming routers.
Even Gamers have a limit to what they will spend on a router. Those who build $2500-$6000+ rather put money that money into the computer build itself and prioritize what they believe is more important in the hardware purchases. When it comes to the home network, they will not easily shell out that same amount. There is only a niche part of the gaming and enthusiast community that will spend beyond $700 for their network. Asus did right by building the router specific to that market, but even they are prepared to possibly get less sales due to the price point and market they are targeting, but those who pick it up, get a well-made piece of quality hardware.
Even in today's market, you still get folks who bulk at a router above $200 let alone $120.00. That is also what helps dictate the market and why you cannot look at someone who builds a high-end to enthusiast base computer and think these same customers, will spend anywhere near that on their home network. That is why a lot of tech stays with the business market, and only begins to move to the consumer market as pricing comes down and there begins to be a need for that tech in the consumer space.