This.
Most western brands are focused in luxury cars where they can get a bigger profit margin, but the part they conveniently forget is that the sales numbers will be low for that segment. And in order to reduce production costs, you have to do mass production (which they can't do because they don't have enough batteries for that).
Chinese companies are taking advantage and flooding the market with cheaper models. And the western companies will complain and whine, trying to get a ban on sales.
The problem with most car makers at the moment is that they try to focus on high-end models to make a bigger margin, and they forgot the lessons of the past. When you do mass production, you manage to improve fabrication and increase margins. VW made a fortune with the Beetles and the Rabbits, because they were AFFORDABLE and reliable cars.
I currently live in Germany and drive a second hand, old Mercedes Benz A-Class. I would really like to have a cheap alternative (no matter the brand) to update to an affordable electric car. The cheapest electric cars I can get cost about 10.000€ and they're all 2 seaters with barely 100 km of autonomy. I do between 25-50 km everyday commuting to work and my kids' schools. That means I'd have to charge the battery every day or two, at the very least. At the speed they degrade, that means I'd have to change the battery just after a few years.
What about a car with a decent range (a real 250-300 km) that is affordable? I don't need it to be very fancy, I just need something I can trust and that I can drive around. I don't want a luxury car, I want utilitarian.
My first car was a Ford Fiesta Ghia from the early 70s, and it was cheap to buy (I could get it second hand for about a month's salary). If I want to get a Fiesta now, it's more like half a year's salary, if I don't eat, drink, or have any other expense (spoiler alert: I have a wife and two kids, and pay a mortgage). Where are the electric Fiestas, Beetles, Fiat 500, and other utilitarian, cheap cars for the masses?
Nowadays, only Chinese brands seem to be thinking about normal people, and the rest focus on luxury models that very few people can afford. Even Tesla scrapped their project for a cheaper car, and they're the ones who have managed to bring the price down and get a bigger margin than the rest. These companies will complain in a while about having lost market share, and they will say that the situation was unpredictable. Well, it was not.
Of course it's a pity that I'll lose some of the savegames and can't sync them to my PC, and it buggers me that I can't keep playing some of the next-gen games on my TV, but this minor annoyance is easily balanced by the fun I had while playing.
I got fully refunded by Google, which means I got 2 controllers, 2 chromecast ultras, and a lot of game hours to play essentially for free.
In any case, during this time the GPU prices went down again and I was recently able to update my PC, so I used my refund from Cyberpunk 2020 from Stadia to get the PC version (at a discount, on Steam, with extra DLC added on), and I continue playing on my desktop. I don't see it as a bad deal.
However, I can only imagine the rage and frustration of many developers who invested themselves on this system, only to have their work scrapped. Those are the true victims of all this.
Mommy, what happens to your files when you die?