Nvidia has quietly done something that says a lot about where its money now comes from: in its latest financial report, the company stopped listing gaming as a separate category. Video cards are no longer presented as their own business line. Instead, Nvidia now rolls them into a broader ”Edge Computing” bucket alongside consoles, robotics chips, and automotive silicon.

The shift is more than cosmetic. Nvidia’s reporting now reads like a company built around data centers and AI, with everything else pushed into the wings. That is not exactly shocking when one segment dwarfs the rest, but it does underline how far the company has moved from the GeForce-era identity that made it famous.

Edge Computing now absorbs Nvidia’s gaming hardware

The new structure leaves Nvidia with just two major lines: Data Center and Edge Computing. Data Center is split into Hyperscale and AI Cloud, Industrial & Enterprise, while Edge Computing now covers the consumer and embedded products that used to get more explicit billing.

The numbers explain why this happened. Data Center brought in $75.2 billion, while Edge Computing accounted for just $6.4 billion, less than 8% of total revenue. In other words, gaming hardware is still around, but it is no longer the star of the show.

A business that now looks almost entirely AI-driven

Growth tells the same story. Data Center revenue rose 92%, compared with 28% for Edge Computing. Total revenue climbed 85% to $81.6 billion, meaning Nvidia made almost as much in this report as it did in the entire first half of the previous year.

Operating profit jumped 147% to $53.5 billion, and net profit reached $58.3 billion, up 211% year on year. For a company once best known to gamers, that is a pretty blunt rebrand without changing the logo: the market has moved on, and Nvidia has followed the cash.

What Nvidia’s new reporting line signals next

Competitors have been heading this way for a while. AMD still talks up gaming chips, but its own growth story increasingly leans on data center and AI accelerators, while Intel has spent years trying to rebuild relevance in the same high-margin enterprise space. Nvidia’s reporting change simply makes the hierarchy impossible to miss.

The open question is whether gaming becomes even more of a side business in future filings, or whether Nvidia keeps folding it into broader categories and lets the numbers speak for themselves. Judging by this report, the company has already chosen its winner.

Source: Ixbt

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