Offering proprietary software features and or artificially segmenting software features, in a massively nvidia saturated market (both consumer and commercial) are not gonna win any market share; neither is it a guarantee that one implementation is better than the other.
And how is this open software features and no segmenting worked out for their market share for now?
Like i said - doing the same thing every time and expecting it to just work eventually will lead nowhere.
AMD needs exclusive features to create a selling point for their cards.
AMD need to focus on one thing, undisputed price and performance value for the newer generation of cards. No one is going to swap for software nonsense.
Does not matter. People bough GTX Titan back in the day despite it being only 3% faster than 290X at nearly double the price.
And similar comparisons can be made with newer cards.
Selling their cards dirt cheap and hoping to grab some market share has not worked.
At worst this strategy will lead to no R&D money at best it will lead to Nvidia slightly lowering it's prices.
Then people will still buy Nvidia. The mindshare is too strong.
What i think AMD should do is put together a 6 year plan (3 generations) and execute like Zen did.
Consistent naming, predictable releases and chiplet innovation. That's the only way to grow mindshare.
Price and feature matter for sure but they're rendered meaningless if the GPU division is seen by everyone by constantly changing naming, broken promises and just generally aimlessly flip-flopping in the wind.