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Oh wow, that's awesome! I didn't know folks ran TDP tests like this, just that my old 3090 seems to have a minimum sweet spot around that same same ~200W based on my own testing, but I figured the 4000 or 5000 series might go lower. Apparently not, at least for the big die.
I also figured the 395 would draw more than 55W! That's also awesome! I suspect newer, smaller GPUs like the 9000 or 5000 series still make the value proposition questionable, but still you make an excellent point.
And for reference, I just checked, and my dGPU hovers around 30W idle with no display connected.
You can boost the 395 up to 120W, which might be where Framework is pushing it too, but those benchmarks are labelled 55W and that's what AMD says is the default clock without adjustment. I'd love to see how the benchmarks compare at that higher boost but I'd imagine it's diminishing returns similar to most GPUs. I think the benefit to using it in a lounge gaming PC would be the super low power draw, but you would need to figure out a display MUX switch and I don't think that's simple with desktop cards. Maybe something with a 5090 mobile would be the go at that point, but I have no idea how that compares to the 395 and whether it's worth it.
Mobile 5090 would be an underclocked, binned desktop 5080, AFAIK:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Nvidia_graphics_processing_units#GeForce_50_series
In KCD2 (a fantastic CryEngine game, a great benchmark IMO), at QHD, the APU is a hair less half as fast. For instance, 39 FPS at QHD vs 84 FPS for the mobile 5090:
https://www.notebookcheck.net/Nvidia-GeForce-RTX-5090-Laptop-Benchmarks-and-Specs.934947.0.html
https://www.notebookcheck.net/AMD-Radeon-8060S-Benchmarks-and-Specs.942049.0.html
Synthetic benchmarks between the two
But these are both presumably running at high TDP (150W for the 5090). Also, the mobile 5090 is catastrophically overpriced and inevitably tied to a weaker CPU, whereas the APU is a monster of a CPU. So make of that what you will.