No shit... I clearly quoted the specs for the xbox one x. You should also use the S specs not the original anyways.... That said history tells us (and we have console benchmarks now) due to console optimizations you can't just equal a console on paper to beat it. I will be surprised if the apu has a solid 1250 clock and that isn't the up-to number. That along with optimizations is the main reason why I don't think this will outperform the original, let alone the ps4/pro which have proper memory bandwidth from the start.
Yes, but you also replied to a post stating that it could be
(my emphasis)
The Xbox One X is not "a console", but the most powerful console out there by far. Which is why your reply is rather silly - you're essentially either saying "It won't match the One X, so it won't match a console", or you're replying to something that was never said.
Also, sure, let's use One S specs: 914MHz it is. Still 350MHz ahead, or ~37% faster. GPU clock performance scaling is usually rather linear, outside of cases where something in the architecture is bottlenecking it. No, we don't know if it will hold those clocks, but given that the actual clock speed is in an area where we know Vega is rather efficient, as opposed to the balls-to-the-wall clocked 56 and 64 cards, chances that the APUs will throttle significantly are rather low. Of course, power scaling and how the APU shares power between the CPU and iGPU are unknowns at this point, but given the 65W TDP and unlocked nature of the chip, I'm not worried about power throttling at stock clocks. And sure, console optimizations matter a lot. Most PC games don't have the option for variable resolution scaling or checkerboard rendering either, so coupled with dedicated optimizations for specific hardware, you'll always be able to squeeze more of the performance potential out of a console. That's a given. The thing is, the Xbox One (S) was significantly bottlenecked by its RAM, which these APUs will rectify for anyone willing to "splurge" on >3000MT/s DDR4. Sure, RAM prices are ridiculous right now, but that's true no matter the speed.
Tl;dr: there are several concrete and well-known reasons why this might outperform the Xbox One, although of course that will depend on a whole host of factors.