AMD's long term strategic choices are FINALLY coming to fruition with the changes in DX12. Async, the investments (early on) in Mantle, they may very well get their money's worth out of it, and myself along with (Im sure) many others have long thought otherwise.
I very, very much like the fact that AMD's cards are now overtaking the Nvidia counterparts. There is finally a performance gap on several price points that Nvidia can no longer 'fix' through Gameworks optimizations and just sending engineers around to devs to 'work on code'. This is exactly the way in which AMD can overtake Nvidia in the long run; not by code-specific adjustments, but by tech on the hardware level that is well suited to a new era in gaming. Having Nvidia play catch-up is good, very good for the market and the fact that an underdog can do this, shows how much there is still to win in terms of efficiency, performance and a healthy marketplace.
Go AMD. For the first time in years, you've got me interested beyond a few marketing slides. Put this performance to work in practical solutions and games, and they may very well be back in the game. I really like seeing Fury cards becoming worth the money, before this it was way too easy to think HBM had no real purpose. However it all depends so much on how well they manage to port this performance boost to games outside Ashes.
@Mussels That seems extremely Nvidia-like for a solution that both keeps their SLI contracts intact and at the same time gives them a feature to 'market'. If they do this, the current 780ti is the last Nvidia card for me