06/14/2026
Gaming PC and enterprise PC news from the past ~24 hours is relatively quiet, with most fresh coverage revolving around ongoing Computex 2026 highlights, recent Steam survey data, and enterprise GPU pricing/availability. 
Hardware Advancements (CPUs, GPUs, Cooling)
• Memory/Cooling: G.Skill highlighted new Ultra Low Latency DDR5 kits (with AMD EXPO support, down to CL26 at DDR5-6000) and actively cooled DDR5 modules (in partnership with Cooler Master) at Computex. These promise better thermals (e.g., ~15% temp reduction) and up to 13% higher average FPS/1% lows in games on AMD platforms; ultra-high-speed kits exceed 10,000 MT/s, with high-capacity options for workstations. 
• GPUs: Nvidia raised pricing on the RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell (workstation/enterprise GPU) to around $13,250. This high-end Blackwell card targets AI, rendering, and professional workloads with substantial VRAM. 
• CPUs: AMD continues gaining ground; no brand-new launches in the last day, but Zen 6 rumors (possible delays) and strong X3D lineup (e.g., Ryzen 9 9950X3D2) remain relevant for gaming. 
Product Releases: Cooler Master unveiled the COSMOS GOLD Limited Edition desktop (Ryzen 9 9950X3D, custom RTX 5090). ASUS ROG G1000 Edition 20 (anniversary high-end gaming desktop) has been noted in recent coverage. 
Software/Market Trends
• Steam Hardware Survey (May 2026 data, recent analysis): AMD reached ~45% CPU share on Windows gaming PCs (up ~0.8% MoM), continuing steady gains against Intel. Radeon GPUs also hit new highs. 
• Broader market: Ongoing concerns about memory/GPU shortages persisting into 2026; Nvidia’s RTX Spark (Arm-based SoC with Blackwell GPU elements for AI/gaming PCs) and enterprise pushes (e.g., RTX Pro servers) are influencing trends, alongside AI integration in workstations. 
Enterprise PCs focus heavily on AI-accelerated systems, with Nvidia’s RTX Pro 6000 Blackwell enabling GPU-accelerated infrastructure for data centers, inference, and professional workflows. Partnerships (e.g., Supermicro) support broader deployment. 
Overall, activity centers on memory innovations for performance/thermals, AMD’s gaming CPU momentum, and high-end/enterprise GPU pricing amid AI demand. Check sites like Tom’s Hardware, KitGuru, or HotHardware for updates, as Computex ripple effects continue.