Oh. Oh my. This is beautiful. It's exactly what I expected. A card that underperformed, didn't OC for crap, and was overpriced because of the CLC. I can't believe people really expected a card that
shipped stock with a AIO water cooling solution would OC well. Of course it gets good temps, the cooler is like $100 tacked onto the pricetag. The power consumption is still garbage, and the performance on sub-4K resolutions is pretty bad. If this were priced around $500 or even $549.99, it would be a decent product, but at $650 I see literally no reason to buy this thing.
I feel we have been misled on VRAM consumption over the years. Some of these sites claim that GTA V and Middle Earth: SoM use 6 GB or more at 4k with high settings, yet looking at theses reviews, there were no signs that the Fury X hit the Vram wall.
TPU already kind of debunked the idea of games using 4GB+ at higher resolutions. For some reason people refused to believe that games wouldn't quickly climb to using 6GB or 8GB. Then, almost immediately after that article was published here, they reviewed The Witcher 3, which used ~2GB of VRAM at 4K, which kind of solidified the idea that VRAM saturation wasn't a real problem, lazy optimization was. A lot of games
can use 6-8GB of VRAM, but most of them don't
need to. There are plenty of games that adapt to the amount of VRAM available too. I remember seeing reviewed of BF3 and BF4 where on cards with more than 4GB of VRAM it would be using 3.5GB give or take, and with 3GB and 2GB cards it would be using near all of it, with no real performance loss.