I hope so, too, but people are too busy pointing the finger at AMD for not bringing competition because they are a convenient scapegoat to the problem of rising GPU prices.
I don't know if people realize that the GPU space, like many markets, is a zero-sum game. Every dollar Nvidia makes is a dollar that AMD doesn't make, and it's especially true in a shrinking market. In general, it takes money to make money in an industry with high R&D and capital costs. Worse yet, when you have a shrinking market with rising capital costs, only those with a dominant enough position to capture the majority portion of the shrinking pie survive. I mean, just look at Intel vs. Samsung vs. TSMC for a textbook example.
TSMC has better node ---> customers flock to TSMC for fabbing cutting edge products ---> TSMC breaks even faster on the cost to develop the node ---> TSMC has more money ---> TSMC makes better node. Rinse and repeat. If you're Samsung, good luck trying to generate revenue when everyone else wants the competitor's product. To catch up when you're lagging behind in that market requires an even larger transfusion of money because you likely don't have as much revenue pouring in from customers to offset costs. Case in point, we have the Korean and American government pouring subsidy money to get Samsung and Intel back into a competitive position.
I've posed the question on these forums before, but with Nvidia being so dominant in the market, even if AMD did not flub N31, I have to seriously question whether or not it's competitiveness would have any bearing on how Nvidia prices their GPUs. When AMD finally had a leg-up over Intel in the server market, Intel didn't actually respond for years because AMD could not ship EPYC at a scale that would actually do any harm to Intel. To this day, AMD still only has sub-30% server market share and I doubt it will ever exceed 50%. There's just not enough runway before Intel gets their act together. Against Nvidia, a runway for AMD to gain market share likely never will exist. Nvidia is just too dominant, and people ultimately choose Nvidia over AMD even when AMD forces Nvidia to drop prices.
If AMD decided to call it quits in the GPU market, I wouldn't even be surprised if people blame AMD for Nvidia's monopoly at that point.