All in all, guys, I can't quite feel the same joy you seem to be feeling in this thread.
nVidia seems to be able to develop 3 different chips in parallel and that with serious architectural changes from project to project
AMD is limited to rolling out in one segment at a time and is doing rather small changes to existing architecture.
Volta is expected in 2017 and it might be to Pascal what Maxwell was to Kepler.
Meanwhile AMD is merely competitive in low range, but even that might evaporate in 2017.
We might end up with AMD not being able to compete in any segment in 2017, and if so, it will be game over.
Why doesn't Nvidia use HBM?
Except it DOES use HBM2 with GP100 chip.
And if you were wondering about something else, namely:
Q: Why did AMD bother with HBM in Fury?
A: Because, being an underdog in a rather desperate positions, they need to gamble on new tech.
Q: Why do nVidia cards normally need less bandwidth, than AMD cards?
A: Compression on nVidia cards is said to be more effective(although AMD should be closing the gap with Polaris). Architectural differences (yeah, a vague statement, I know) more effective use of cache might also play role.
36% to 42% faster in overall gaming than Maxwell
I guess you are comparing 450$ chip (1070) to 330$ chip (970), makes a lot of sense.
Pascal is also suppose to be using tile based rendering, something not found on Maxwell 1/2.
I doubt the "not found on Maxwell" part.
I thought Nvidia was a corporation? What are corporations after? Oh yeah, money.
Yeah, "companies make money" = "all company get as low as nVidia, after all, they also make money", very logical statement.