Regardless of whether or not its the best gaming card, the primary revenue stream for the RTG is gaming. Same goes for nVIDIA as the majority of their revenue and profits come from the gaming market. Its their core and primary business in terms of video cards. So saying things like "its not meant to be" is a poor attempt at masking their failure. If for all intent and purpose that was their goal, to go for a more compute orientated card and go after those markets, then they've essentially risked their primary business doing so.
From my industrial experience (I know its anecdotal but Im thinking alot of users will share the same sentiment), only a few very specific type of work loads in a prosumer environment (engineering for instance) actually benefit from having a workstation or compute GPU to do the work. Most of the performance comes down to the CPU/Memory and the hard disk..
VEGA has failed to meet performance targets. Its missed the power targets. Its not even that great in terms of compute mainly due to lacking the sofare toolchains and libraries. And its late.
And can we not start one of those "the human eye can only see X FPS so A cards are not required" arguments.. and no your general adobe experience outside very specific work types will not be greatly enhanced by using VEGA as opposed to a GTX1080. Actually Id rather have the 1080 because with VEGA your going to consume more power even for 2D tasks.
Su already explained, a few times, that RTG focus has been aimed at compute for some time, and the much, much, much larger outside of gaming. "RTGs primary revenue stream has been gaming" doesn't mean that is their strategy going forward, especially if they are aiming for a more profitable piece of the pie.
Assuming this actually works out for them--maybe by the time of a mature Navi this will be more apparent--AMD could be poised to have a solid lineup of premium consumer GPUs for compute and all applications that aren't games, that can also game
pretty damn well. But this FE/RX branding doesn't seem to point towards that strategy, but they do have the dual FE/gaming driver package for the FE, right? That could be a preliminary sign of where they intend to release their product stack going forward. A single use high-performance chip that is optimized for various use cases with an on-the-fly driver switch.
Do you know what Vega's performance targets were? Does anyone know this outside of AMD and RTG? We need to know those targets before we can claim that it failed to meet them. I'm not downplaying the fact that this release is disappointing for many, many reasons, but too many consumers are injecting assumptions into this project where no one really has the info.