GALAX fans had a confusing few days after reports claimed the graphics card brand was ending global operations. The story has now been clarified. GALAX is not leaving the graphics card market. Instead, its management is being centralized under Palit Group, which has owned GALAX since 2007.
The confusion started after earlier information suggested that GALAX offices were closing and that Palit would take full control of the brand’s operations, including support and RMA services. That led many users to believe GALAX was disappearing completely. However, Palit and GALAX later issued a joint statement saying those shutdown reports were inaccurate.
Palit says GALAX, KFA2, and HOF will continue as brands while management becomes more centralized
According to the joint statement, GALAX will continue developing, producing, and supporting its high-performance hardware. Palit says the recent internal changes are part of a planned global management shift, not a full exit from the GPU business. The GALAX, KFA2, and HOF brands will now be managed more directly from Palit Group headquarters.
This means customers should not treat GALAX cards as abandoned products. Palit says product plans are continuing and support remains in place. The company also said the goal is to improve global visibility, streamline production and logistics, and combine research and development work across the group.
| What changed | What it means for users |
|---|---|
| GALAX management is moving under Palit Group | Brand decisions will be handled more centrally |
| GALAX is not shutting down | Current and future products are still planned |
| KFA2 and HOF are included in the shift | Palit will manage the wider brand family together |
| Support will continue through official channels | Customers should still be able to get service and RMA help |
The HOF name is especially important for PC enthusiasts. GALAX’s Hall of Fame graphics cards have built a strong reputation among overclockers because of their high-end power designs, white PCBs, and premium cooling. Many users were worried that the HOF lineup could disappear if GALAX truly exited the market.
For now, Palit’s message is that these products are not going away. In fact, the company says it is preparing the brands for the next generation of computing. That sounds like Palit wants to keep the familiar names alive while reducing overlap behind the scenes.
The move also fits the wider pressure inside the GPU market. AI demand has made graphics hardware supply more complicated, and many companies are trying to simplify operations. Bringing GALAX, KFA2, and HOF management closer to Palit could help the group control costs, supply, and product planning more tightly.
Still, the correction matters. The original concern was that GALAX was disappearing from the global GPU scene. The updated position is different: GALAX remains alive, but the way it is managed is changing.
For buyers, the practical takeaway is simple. GALAX graphics cards should continue to be supported, and the brand is not officially leaving the market. The bigger question is how this new structure will affect future HOF and KFA2 products, pricing, regional availability, and customer service quality.



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