A bit of a side question. How well have graphics cards like the Radeon VII and the various professional 16GB models and especially the 32GB and 2X32GB ones aged? How do they feel in use nowadays?
I went from:
R9 290X 4GB (512-bit GDDR5) to RX580 8GB (256-bit GDDR5) to 6500XT 4GB (64-bit GDDR6)
(it was quantifiably slightly faster than the 580, BTW), then to a Vega 64 8GB (2048-bit HBM2),
and currently am on a Radeon Instinct MI25 flashed into a WX9100 16GB (2048-bit HBM2).
The Vega 64 and 'WX9100' both made games that were
FPS-wise playable but didn't feel smooth, smooth. (I run a 144hz 1080p VA LCD)
They have "aged" better than most hardware I've bought; approaching the longevity of my i7-3770k (or an X79-build).
Also, I swear AA is less penalizing w/ HBM2 (but that may well be a projection of expectations)
-I absolutely love my HBM2 cards
If there weren't higher priorities for my meager
discretionary spending, I'd 'stock up' on $75-100 MI25s, re-flash them, 'bin' them, and hang onto them as collectables. IMO, "HBM" on consumer GPUs was a 'thing' that will never happen again.
(separate topic: but I feel the same about Optane as it's liquidated and retired. I have 'stocked up' on "16GB" M10 drives )
There is a sad part, though: All Vega 20 GPU-based cards (Especially the
Radeon VII cards), are
all pre-destined to kill themselves.
(think: early-run Xbox 360 RRoD cause, taken to another level)
The only saving grace would be an owner that's aware of Vega 20's thermal warping, and underclocks+undervolts the card.
Pro cards are often in 'thermally disadvantaged environments', so even the cooler and lower clocked Apple and Pro Vega 20 products have a decent chance of
eventually breaking themselves. Even WaterCooling will not save Vega 20; VIIs under water have also had endemic-level problems w/ the
GPU itself warping away from the PCB. This problem isn't
typical "cold solder joints", the arrangement of the BGA contacts and thickness of the GPU's packaging, along with Vega's current and thermal
transients lends towards warping.
^TBQH, I am deeply concerned that this isn't going to end up
isolated to Vega 20. Other than the details of the GPU chip's construction, the newest cards from nVidia and AMD both
seem at risk of having this happen 3, 5, 7 years
down the line.