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noticiasPublicado 2026-06-28

The Igloo — The AI Memory Crunch Comes for Your Games

La historia más grande de los videojuegos este fin de semana no es un juego, es el precio de la caja en la que lo juegas. Microsoft y Apple ahora culpan a la demanda de memoria de los centros de datos de IA al subir precios de hardware, y Lenovo dice que es la nueva normalidad. Además: Evo 2026 encendió Las Vegas, Phasmophobia se va a 2027 y CD Projekt se cambió el nombre a algo gloriosamente confuso.

The Igloo — The AI Memory Crunch Comes for Your Games
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Sunday, June 28, 2026. The biggest thing in games this weekend isn't a release or a showcase. It's a number on a price tag — and for once, the reason is sitting right there in plain English, signed by Microsoft and Apple. The AI boom has started quietly competing with you for the silicon inside your console.

The lead · The AI memory crunch comes for your games

Two of the biggest hardware makers on earth raised prices this past week, and both pointed at the same culprit. Microsoft, explaining its Xbox price hike, said "console storage and memory prices have increased by more than 2.5x and we expect another doubling by the fall of 2027" (Xbox, via Polygon). Apple was even more blunt about why, telling MacRumors: "The rapid expansion of AI data centers has created an extraordinary surge in demand for memory and storage. We have never seen a component price increase this much, this quickly" (MacRumors).

Why it matters to players. Your console, your gaming PC, and your handheld are all built from the same DRAM and NAND chips that the AI data centers are now buying by the truckload. When a hyperscaler and a kid saving up for a Steam Machine are bidding on the same memory, the kid loses. That's not a metaphor — it's the supply chain. And it doesn't look temporary: Lenovo, presenting at ISC 2026, said these astronomical memory prices are likely the new normal heading toward 2030, because even ramping up production won't close the gap fast enough (Rock Paper Shotgun).

The AI angle — and this is the angle. Most weeks, "what AI is doing to games" means a tool, an NPC trick, or a generated texture. This week it's something simpler and harder to argue with: AI is making games more expensive to play. Not the games themselves — the machines. It's a real cost, and it's worth being clear-eyed rather than doom-y about it. Two honest reads: the squeeze hits new hardware hardest, so the secondhand market, older consoles, and a long-tail of games you already own just got a lot more valuable; and it strengthens the case cloud and streaming have been making for years, scarce local silicon or not. The frontier everyone keeps cheering for has a bill, and some of it is landing on the gaming aisle.

Two penguins huddled together under blankets, happily sharing one handheld console in a warm igloo — the flip side of the crunch.

The flip side of the crunch is quietly hopeful: the games and consoles you already love just got more precious. Two penguins, one handheld, zero new hardware required.

Evo 2026 lit up Vegas

The fighting-game world had its biggest weekend of the year. Evo 2026 ran in Las Vegas and, as ever, doubled as a Summer Game Fest for the genre — reveals stuffed between matches across multiple streams. The haul included Rivals of Aether 2, Avatar Legends: The Fighting Game, Tekken 8, and Marvel Tokon: Fighting Souls moments, plus the Evo France lineup (Oct. 9–11), where the freshly shipped Avatar Legends and Marvel Tokon will make their Evo debut (Polygon).

The craft angle is in the restraint. Street Fighter 6's developers said they have no current plans to make major changes to the game's system mechanics — a quiet but real design decision, because a competitive game's biggest feature is stability you can trust (IGN). Meanwhile ArcSystem Works and Marvel Games walked through how they reworked Magneto in response to beta feedback to make "the coolest version" they could (IGN). The take: in a grim stretch for the industry, the fighting-game scene is one corner that's genuinely thriving — fed by developers who listen and then sweat the frame data.

Also in the Igloo

  • Phasmophobia slips its 1.0 to 2027. Kinetic Games pushed its long-awaited full launch back, "prioritising quality over speed," while promising the reworked Willow Street map by the end of July and two big quality-of-life updates (Eurogamer). The take: a runaway-hit early-access game choosing to slow down for polish is the opposite of this year's "ship it faster" energy — and it's the right call when your whole appeal is dread done carefully.

  • Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 crosses 6 million. Warhorse's dense, deliberately uncompromising medieval RPG — no superheroes, no live-service hooks, just a stubborn commitment to historical detail — has now sold six million copies worldwide (Eurogamer). The take: depth still sells. You don't have to chase the trend of the month to find a giant audience; sometimes the trend is "make the thing extremely well."

One more thing

CD Projekt rebranded itself as CD Projekt Red — or "CD Projekt Red Spółka Akcyjna," to be precise — which is gloriously confusing, because the studio that makes Cyberpunk and The Witcher, CD Projekt Red, is also still called CD Projekt Red (Eurogamer). The parent now shares a name with its most famous child. Somewhere, a brand consultant is very proud and a lot of search engines are very confused.


This is the print twin of today's episode of The Igloo, The Penguin Alley's daily gaming show — the day's biggest stories and what AI is doing to games, fast and no hype. Browse the show and listen to today's episode here.

Sources: Polygon · Xbox · MacRumors · Rock Paper Shotgun · Polygon (Evo 2026) · IGN (Street Fighter 6) · Eurogamer (Phasmophobia) · Eurogamer (KCD2) · Eurogamer (CD Projekt)

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