# Why Everything Got More Expensive: The Memory Crisis, Explained (via Dave2D)

> Source: <https://vettedconsumer.com/why-everything-got-more-expensive-the-memory-crisis-explained-via-dave2d/>
> Published: 2026-06-06 22:54:49+00:00

If you've noticed that *everything* — laptops, mini PCs, handhelds, even the famously cheap Steam Deck — got more expensive lately, you're not imagining it. The 1 TB Steam Deck OLED jumped **$300 overnight** (from $649 to $949), and Dave2D's latest video explains the root cause better than anything we've seen: a memory-pricing crisis driven by the AI boom. We summarized it so you understand exactly what's happening to the prices on every device we cover.

*Full explainer: "Even The Steam Deck Got Hit" — Dave2D*

## Why prices exploded

It comes down to memory. Roughly **90% of the world's DRAM** is made by just three companies — Samsung, SK Hynix, and Micron. There are three flavors: DDR (desktops), LPDDR (laptops and phones), and **HBM** (the high-bandwidth memory inside the NVIDIA GPUs that run AI). Here's the killer detail: HBM needs roughly **three times the factory capacity** per gigabyte as regular memory, and its yields are brutal — Dave notes 35–40% of HBM output is scrapped. Because HBM is wildly profitable, the big three have shifted production toward it. Less regular DRAM is being made, demand stays high, and prices climb — until you get a nearly $1,000 Steam Deck.

## Why it's not just "greedy companies"

The useful takeaway for buyers: this isn't Valve (or Apple, or ASUS) padding margins. The memory and storage inside these devices reportedly cost *triple* what manufacturers want to pay. It's also why the cheapest entry-level Mac mini quietly disappeared, why the Switch 2 got a pre-launch bump, and why the mini PCs we cover keep nudging up in price. The finger, Dave argues, points at the memory makers — an industry that learned to **never overproduce** after decades of boom-bust collapses.

## What viewers are saying

The comment section appreciated the clarity — and captured the mood:

"Every computer in my house is worth more or the same as what I bought it for 2 to 5 years ago — but even if I sell them to make a profit, I can't afford to buy anything to fill their place." — @Collin_J

Others praised the breakdown itself: "One of the best explanations of the whole RAM situation and pricing… the difference between DDR, LPDDR and HBM" (@GetVladimir). It's a rare video where the educational detour *is* the value.

## What people on Reddit are saying

The frustration is everywhere. r/gaming's ["Steam Deck Price Increase"](https://www.reddit.com/r/gaming/comments/1tpc6g9/?ref=vettedconsumer.com) thread is full of buyers retreating to their backlogs and older consoles, with a weary "you will own nothing and like it" running through it. But there's a real glimmer of hope worth watching: r/technology has been circulating reports that [memory prices may fall as China ramps up DRAM and NAND output](https://www.reddit.com/r/technology/comments/1tkom9n/?ref=vettedconsumer.com), flooding the market. If that plays out, the current pricing could ease over the next year — which directly affects when you should buy.

## The bottom line

If you need a device *now*, go in clear-eyed: today's prices reflect a genuine component crunch, not a temporary sale gap, so don't wait for a "deal" that may not come this quarter. If you can hold, watching the DRAM supply story is the smart move — added Chinese capacity could bring relief. For anyone buying anyway, the [Steam Deck OLED](https://www.amazon.com/s?k=Steam+Deck+OLED&tag=57eqvt-20&ref=vettedconsumer.com) is still one of the best-value handhelds even at the new price, precisely because Valve subsidizes the hardware. And if you're upgrading a desktop, lock in [DDR5 kits](https://www.amazon.com/s?k=DDR5+RAM+32GB&tag=57eqvt-20&ref=vettedconsumer.com) sooner rather than later.
