This is why AMD should always go Halo (hell, paper launch a halo just for the mindshare). At some point the competition trips up really badly and you recover off a bad gen. That's where the wins happen. AMD kept swinging for the fences with their ZEN Cpus and eventually Intel tripped and never really got back up again.
Unfortunately, here, AMD didn't even show up in the big die space Halo space and they've inadvertently given Nvidia a generation to regroup.
Just the old "you miss 100% of the shots you don't take" mentality. AMD looks to have missed this one to recapture some mindshare.
I Don't agree at all.
These shots you aren't taking, are NOT free. It costs mega bucks just in up front costs to bring extremely large complex dies to market.
Let's flush 80 Million down the drain hoping NVidia shoots itself in the foot, is not a good strategy.
As you move up the stack, the business case (making all your money back on up front costs) gets weaker and weaker.
At the 5090 level you probably need NVidia volumes and NVidia pricing. Even if AMD beat 5090, they would most likely get both a lower price and a lower volume, and could still have a failed business case.
While it's a little early to start using hindsight on this generation,
I'm betting that NVidia still ends up with better performance/area this generation, meaning even this generation, AMD would have still failed.
NVidia's lack of progress this generation was an unwillingness to build larger dies on what is essentially the same process. Except on the lunatic size 5090. There is really no room left for AMD to significantly outsize the 5090 die either.
The time AMD might consider making a run at the 090, is ONLY ifAMD make some kind of big performance boosting breakthrough that the think NVidia is not getting. Then it would be worth a shot, because just trying to out-lunatic NVidia on maximum die size, seems like a costly recipe for failure.