Apart from the fact that APU_Fusion was obviously joking:
If it's done by sacrificing IPC like Netburst and Bulldozer did, then sure, but that's not what AMD will be doing.
Increasing clocks runs exponentially into higher thermals past a certain point (and super linearly before that even). Especially in a MT cpu design, thermal density and power consumption are more the limiting factor than the pipeline stalling out due to sync issues.
That's harder to get right than clockspeed increases, though.
Yes, it certainly is.... and it isn't without trade-offs.
Not in every workload, and even there it usually loses against the 9800X3D.
I believe that the reason it performs poorly compared to 9800X3D is mostly due to the overall latency difference .... greatly reduced in X3D by keeping much of the information in L3 which is much lower latency than main memory.
It's a neat trick, but as I was saying, it isn't impossible to believe NVL will improve by much more than people are giving voice to at this time simply by big improvements in that God Awful latent ring bus.
Zen4->5 was on a barely improved node, with a ~30% fatter core due to full-rate AXV512/512bit FP pipes and 50% more INT ALUs.
It was a very server-focused design, so hitting 6+ GHz was secondary, as server CPUs don't clock in that range anyway.
With Zen6 on the other hand, the only server-focused aspect is the design of the 32c dense CCD, otherwise it seems to be more about clocks and core count.
... and it will be server focused again for Zen 6. Nothing has changed in that respect. AMD makes the best margins in DC. It makes sense for them to focus on that market.
I suspect the clocks have much more (everything) to do with the greatly improved process node (N4P->N2) than any minor tweaks we will see in architecture between Z5 and Z6.