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Its just a name. Look at the specs
you mean that Titan they started calling an x90 for three consecutive generations now? Anything built on a chip bigger than x104 is 'Titan' territory bud. Again... just look at shader count and the older titans. A name is just a name.
Well... I hate to put the mirror in front of you, but wasn't it you who said this class of GPU is the new alternative to SLI? Divide by two and you've got two very 'reasonable' 300W GPUs, and you don't pull 600W continuously from a 5090 either.
It is in theory just a name, but it's alot more complicated than that, but i'm sure you know that Nvidia is using its naming schemes to push prices upwards, and give people less than they previously got for the same money. They really started it in 2012 when they came up with the titan naming, where prior to kepler the x80 was always equipped with big chip, but with the 600 series only the titan card got the big chip, while 680 was based on a midtier chip. But they went back on to the previous model with the 700 series kepler refresh, where the 780 also got the big chip, but you still had the titan above it, and that continued for many gens. 780 ti, 980 ti, 1080 ti, 2080 ti were all the big chip, with a reasonable price (2080 ti less so), but with a titan above them at twice the price, or even more.
With 3000 series, the 3080 was the big chip aswell - and hardly titan territory. Actually the best value product since prior to kepler, if it hadn't been for that crypto crap (which ought to be illegal !)
You can definitely make the argument that with the 4000 series and now the 5000 series, the x90 cards simply replaced the titan cards, and nvidia went back to the 600 series setup, where only the titan card gets the big chip, while x80 is based on a (at best) midtier chip.
The reason why i say that their video is correct, is based upon the fact that post 2012 the x80 ti would have been the consumer flagship gpu with the big chip, with a titan existing as something a bit seperate above it - a little extra performance for a ludicrous price increase. With 3000 series 3090 ti took that role.
But now that nvidia has significantly reduced the stack in the top end, leaving only 1 card with the big chip, you will have to consider that the flagship (rather than extreme flagship), and thus the 5090 goes up against the 4090, 3090, 2080 ti, 1080 ti, 980 ti, etc etc etc, which were all consumer cards based on the big chip of their time.
Should there have been a card inbetween 5090 and 5080 ? Obviously. But no real competition creates this scenario - actually the same scenario as with kepler, where nvidia were so far ahead of amd that they thought they could get away with anything (until amd came with the 290x anyways).