But they still can limit either RX 7700 or 7800 (or even both) to 2500 MHz for whatever reason, be it competition with other their cards or target TGP, or whatnot. This limit would be implemented via BIOS/straps shenanigans and not by the architecture per se of course. //I don't see a reason for 2500 MHz limit in 7700 though as this will effectively make this card's superiority over RX 6700 series too negligible//
I doubt they'll limit The RX 7700 or 7800 though; They haven't done that for any of the previous few generations, and some of those cards have been in similar market conditions to what we have today. The mining crash that caused late 2018/early 2019 flood of Polaris and lower-end Pascal in the market mirrors all the unsold RDNA2 and Ampere stock we're seeing right now.
As I said earlier, AMD aren't competing with just the Nvidia 40-series, they're competing with every last gen card still sat on store shelves, despite their discounted price. Artificially limiting Navi32 for
any reason doesn't make sense to me as AMD will charge us as much as they can for the silicon that they already paid TSMC a fixed price for, a year or more ago.
Whether Navi31 had issues or not, my question was whether AMD have had a chance to respin/tweak/fix/improve on it in the last 10 months. (please select whichever word
doesn't trigger you as necessary). Navi 31 is out, it's successful, it's selling well, and it's competitive. How it's flawed or not isn't really the issue and more importantly, it's not going to change past, present, or future Navi31 cards. The only relevance Navi31's design success has is on the speculation of whether AMD found something they could fix in the last ten months or not. At worst, Navi31 is as good as RDNA3 gets, and we're going to get a lukewarm, unexciting (but welcome) Navi32. On the other hand, if there were flaws that AMD has managed to correct in the last 10 months, Navi32 could turn out to be an absolute belter of a GPU.
Since this is a discussion based on a MLID source, here's a 'wonderful' MLID take on Navi31:
Pretty fuzzy and citing anonymous sources at AMD/partners rather than named sources like Steve(GN), Wendel (L1T), or Gordon (PCW) but also laid out much more convincingly alongside the glaringly mismatched performance graphs of what AMD promised and what AMD delivered. Memories are obviously short around here, but Navi31 was disappointing
only because it failed to match the performance of even AMD's own cherry-picked benchmarks. Reviewed without those overhyped expectations, the 7900XTX is great.