Despite recent reports Galax reassures customers that it has not pulled an EVGA and exited the graphics card market

A Galax RTX 5060 Ti Unparallelled Max 16 GB graphics card on a blue and green background
(Image credit: Galax)

Galax has been around for as long as I have—literally, as it was founded in 1994, the same year I was founded—and its Nvidia graphics cards, often under their European KFA2 branding, have often tempted me with their typically budget-oriented price tags. So, I was very saddened to hear, ealier today, that apparently the company is exiting the PC business. Except it's not actually exiting at all, as Palit, who owns Galax, has since confirmed.

The original report from Wccftech relayed a statement, seemingly from Galax, that stated "Palit has assumed full control and operations of the Galax brand... Palit becomes solely responsible for all activities and commitments related to the brand.

"We emphasize that both are Nvidia-authorized partners, ensuring the legitimacy and continuity of our services. Following the closure of the previous organizational structure and the dismissal of its team, all management and operations will now be handled exclusively through Palit’s official channels."

Wccftech claimed Galax had "left the PC market", but perhaps that "continuity of our services" line should have been a hint that that isn't what's going on here. Instead, it seems the Galax staff base might have been gutted but the brand nevertheless lives on under Palit, which already owned Galax.

A statement from Palit, which Wccftech has since also added to its report, clarifies: "GALAX is not ceasing operations. We remain fully committed to the development, production, and support of our high-performance hardware. Our product roadmap continues as planned, and our commitment to delivering cutting-edge technology to gamers and creators remains our top priority."

Two RTX 5060 Ti graphics cards lined up next to an RTX 4060 Ti.

(Image credit: Future)

It does, however, say that "the recent internal transitions are part of a pre-planned global initiative to integrate brand management for enhanced operational efficiency and cross-departmental synergy."

Which doesn't conflict with the original claimed statement from Galax, as it sounds like a corporate-y way of saying the previous team has been dismissed and the organisational structure closed down. According to Palit, there will be a new "unified global mangement" structure that is centralised at Palit HQ and will cover Galax, KFA2, and HOF brands.

It's easy to see how wires might have gotten crossed here, though. If a previous organisational structure and team is waving goodbye, then in some sense the previous brand is dead. Except that's not always how things work in the PC hardware industry. Brands sometimes subsume other brands and still try to stick to that brand's identity and goals—take Corsair with Scuf or Elgato, for instance. And Palit has owned Galax for a long time, so things might not be changing massively from what was already going on behind closed doors anyway.

Regardless, it looks like we'll still be seeing all those cheaper Galax and KFA2 graphics cards yet; the company hasn't pulled a complete EVGA on us. Though time will tell just how similar new, fully-Palit but still-called-Galax products will be to previous ones. I just hope the brand still pumps out the occasional cool design like the super skinny RTX 5060 Ti at the top of this article.

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Jacob Fox
Hardware Writer

Jacob got his hands on a gaming PC for the first time when he was about 12 years old. He swiftly realised the local PC repair store had ripped him off with his build and vowed never to let another soul build his rig again. With this vow, Jacob the hardware junkie was born. Since then, Jacob's led a double-life as part-hardware geek, part-philosophy nerd, first working as a Hardware Writer for PCGamesN in 2020, then working towards a PhD in Philosophy for a few years while freelancing on the side for sites such as TechRadar, Pocket-lint, and yours truly, PC Gamer. Eventually, he gave up the ruthless mercenary life to join the world's #1 PC Gaming site full-time. It's definitely not an ego thing, he assures us.

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