There are videos like the above that demonstrate the over-tesselation. That video doesn't even go over the undermap tessellation that occurred in that game either, which was another problem.
No the reason you won't address the rest is because you can't think of anything other than personal attacks as usual.
First, remembering something does not make it a grudge. You are making that assumption on your own there. I'll bring it up ad infinitum when discussing Nvidia's history of dirty practices because that's what it is. Same as with Dell screwing over the entire x86 market for 10 years by creating an Intel monopoly or Monsanto poisoning the world. Those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it. Really though your labeling of it as a "grudge" is just you trying to avoid having an actual argument.
That's a load of nonsense and you know it. Tom Peterson from Nvidia was interviewed on the topic (he currently works at intel) and he specifically said GameWorks tech at the time was a black box, meaning the devs cannot access the code. The excuse used at the time was that Nvidia did not want to give away proprietary tech to competitors but the end result is that Crytek could do very little.
You don't seem to realize that it was JonnyGuru, currently the lead engineer for Corsair's PSU division, who pointed out the fact that it was the card feeding noise back into the 12v sense pin. Many users have verified this fact by cutting the 12v sense wire, which eliminated their issue. Seasonic issued replacement cables for those that wanted them that had the wire removed.
Oh but I'm sure Dr. Dro's ability to ignore Nvidia problems outweights JonnyGuru's expertise and everyone else's to boot. Case in point:
Facts are frustrating for you? Hmm, I wonder why...
His issue with Nvidia, as plainly stated in the video, was that they are terrible to work with. Your conclusion is an invention, not supported by anything and ignores plainly shown evidence.
I'd argue AMD drivers have been a bit better than Nvidia's recently (which is to say both are very stable). To say that AMD drivers have "an untold amount of issues" is obviously complete nonsense.
This is not an issue with AMD cards. You are thinking of the bug where windows update would try to install graphics drivers during an AMD driver install. Obviously though, that was a windows issue.
For someone who rails against "hoaxes", you sure have no problem saying things that you didn't bother checking where true.
This is not a thing that happens in any statistically significant manner.
There might be a handful of Nvidia and AMD users that do so because they choose to do so.
I don't remember people doing this even when drivers were significantly less refined.
There are many reasons people buy video cards, just because a person buys Nvidia does not mean they didn't value open source. You are ignoring some 12+ other variables people consider outside of the open source one that all factor into a GPU purchase, with the big ones being price, performance, and features. Efficiency, looks, and others typically following although that may vary from person to person. Efficiency for example may be a major factor for many.
lol, yeah and neither does any GeForce card below the 4090. Hence why it's the one and only top tier card.
You are ignoring the fact that at every tier below that AMD cards are performance and price competitive.
How exactly does your logic make any sense here, all Nvidia cards are premium products because the 4090 exists? Nvidia cards are worth 5-15% more because they have a better feature set, not because of whatever cockamaney reasoning you are using here.