If this current writing venture I'm on now pays off, I ought to be making a solid 4 figures a month from Amazon by the end of the year (middle to higher end 4-figures at that; could be easily $5,000 a month on top of my current day job's income, for a grand total of around $7,000 a month) and that's just a mid-range area of success. Nothing says it's impossible, and I've done everything necessary for that to pass.
So assuming that I do manage that, I figured something I'd eventually do with such a windfall would be to look into a new computer.
"But don't you already have a relatively new computer with a 3080?"
Yes, I do, and I'm not getting rid of it. The funniest thing about that is: I bought this current rig intending to basically be future proofed for any video gaming I wanted to do, ultra settings with mods for the games I wanted to play (GTA 5, Cities: Skylines, Mirror's Edge Catalyst, Far Cry 5, ultra-modded Skyrim, games from the 2000s like Sim City 4, GTA 3/Vice City/San Andreas, Call of Duty '03, Rollercoaster Tycoon 3, and Command and Conquer: Generals, etc.) and reasonably high settings for far more modern games (the nearly fully fixed Cyberpunk 2077 and its inevitable sequel, GTA 6, whatever else seems to tickle my brain)
Same thing with VR. When I still had my Quest 2, using the PC with it was a dream come true.... for the PC, that is; the Quest 2 wasn't quite good enough for my tastes and I figured I'd hold out for a VR headset at least half as good as the Varjo XR-3.
So that's all well and good, right?
Well.... I got this PC in late 2021, RMA'd the first one, and got a better replacement in early 2022, that February is when it came in. There was no game I couldn't play.
But you know what else released in 2022?

And all of a sudden, this PC that would have been the most powerful on the planet 20 years prior and was able to play Cyberpunk 2077 at ultra settings at above 60fps was suddenly just barely able to do AI slop above ~712x712 (though finetunes eventually allowed 1.5 to go up to 1024x1024 with ease, but then XL/Pony came out and I'm finding a bunch of LoRAs that only work at ~600sx600s before I'm out of VRAM.
Not that I really showcase AI slop publicly anymore (I was already starting to realize "AI slop is as interesting to others as talking about your dream" as early as 2023, and especially now that it's considered bad taste to show off AI slop outside places specifically meant for it, I've largely just ceased any public showcase except in private to friends who are already interested) but still... just ouch. This must be what it was like using PCs in the 90s, when something cutting edge and over-capable one year was barely able to run anything contemporary as little as 2 years later (the classic example being a fairly beefy PC circa 1994 that can run DOOM struggling to deal with Quake two years later due to things like lacking 3D acceleration software)
So yeah, that's the goal, to eventually upgrade to something with more VRAM. Though I will admit that I'm not exactly chomping at the bit or even particularly researching anything (I mean I haven't actually made anything yet, that's all to be seen in the coming months). The news about Intel's utter failure with their recent generation of chips isn't really instilling any confidence in me to use them again. NVIDIA has yet to release the 50 series, and I'm not 100% hot on them either. Apparently the 5090 will have 24GB of VRAM. Wouldn't be surprised if it actually cost $5,090 as well considering how inflated their prices are getting. Might as well just wait for them to finally bump those numbers up with a later generation. It's not like this current PC is struggling in any sort of way.
But if this turn out fortuitously and I do have the chance, I would absolutely not mind aiming for the high-end at some point next year.
And remember my friend, future events such as these will affect you in the future